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                    <text>Morningside College Conservatory of music&#13;
&#13;
RE CITAL&#13;
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&#13;
Jeanne Anderson&#13;
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ROBERT Lowry&#13;
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&#13;
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Lauretta&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
King&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
I&#13;
Sonata for Harpsichord and Flute&#13;
&#13;
J S. Bach&#13;
&#13;
Andante and presto&#13;
Allegro&#13;
Adagio&#13;
Menuetto&#13;
&#13;
Miss Anderson&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Sonata for Clarinet and Piano&#13;
Allegretto&#13;
All egro animato&#13;
&#13;
Lento&#13;
Molto Allegro&#13;
MR. LOWRY&#13;
&#13;
C. Saint-Saens&#13;
&#13;
�III&#13;
Claude Debussy&#13;
Georges Hue&#13;
&#13;
L'apres-Midi D'un Faune&#13;
Serenade&#13;
Poem&#13;
&#13;
Charles Griffes&#13;
Miss Anderson&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
Concertino&#13;
&#13;
Guilhaud-Paquot&#13;
&#13;
Piece in G minor&#13;
&#13;
Gabriel Pierne&#13;
Dinicu-Heifetz&#13;
&#13;
Hora Stacatto&#13;
MR. LOWRY&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
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MISS ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
J S Bach&#13;
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              <text>Morningside College Conservatory of music&#13;
&#13;
RECITAL&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
Jeanne Anderson&#13;
Flutist&#13;
ROBERT Lowry&#13;
Clarinetist&#13;
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Frances Walker&#13;
Lauretta King&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory REClTAL HALL&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday Evening, may 7, 1940&#13;
8 15 O'Clock&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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&#13;
J S. Bach&#13;
&#13;
Andante and presto&#13;
Allegro&#13;
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Menuetto&#13;
&#13;
Miss Anderson&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
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III&#13;
Claude Debussy&#13;
Georges Hue&#13;
&#13;
L'apres-Midi D'un Faune&#13;
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Poem&#13;
&#13;
Charles Griffes&#13;
Miss Anderson&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
Gabriel Pierne&#13;
Dinicu-Heifetz&#13;
&#13;
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MR. LOWRY&#13;
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                    <text>The Iowa Bandmasters&#13;
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Robert E. Lowry. President&#13;
&#13;
M ORTON&#13;
&#13;
GOULD&#13;
with the&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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Sioux City Municipal Auditorium&#13;
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&#13;
�SIOUXLAND&#13;
FLUTE AND PICCOLO&#13;
Nathan Jones Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
Fred Eppstein Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
John Schwartz Atkinson, Nebr&#13;
Paul Bolman, Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
OBOE&#13;
Ardeen Foss Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
Bob Baxter Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
ENGLISH HORN&#13;
Ronn Veenker Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
BASSOON&#13;
Kenneth Johnson Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Jack Noble Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
Tommy Knutson Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
Eb CLARINET&#13;
Kermit Peters Remsen, Ia.&#13;
Bb CLARINET&#13;
*Robert Lowry Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
John Berigan, Lyons, Nebr&#13;
Oscar Loe Hudson, So. Dak.&#13;
Verner Herman Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
*Bill Green Storm Lake, Ia.&#13;
Albert Ocker Sioux City, I a .&#13;
Jack Lamb Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Lee McGinnis Alta, Ia.&#13;
Ira Vail LeMars, Ia.&#13;
Fred Johnson Yankton, So. Dak.&#13;
Bob Zanger Tekamah, Nebr&#13;
Mahlon Reckoff Storm Lake, Ia.&#13;
Lou Reed Spencer, Ia.&#13;
ALTO CLARINET&#13;
Bob Meloy Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Roger Hall Marcus, Ia.&#13;
BASS CLARINET&#13;
Ira Schwarz Walthill, Nebr&#13;
Dean Marshall Little Rock, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
CORNET&#13;
K a rl Rogosch Akron, Iowa.&#13;
J a ck Krusenstjerna Sioux City Ia.&#13;
*Ray DeVilbiss Vermillion,&#13;
So. Dak.&#13;
Nor m a n Stafford Odebolt,&#13;
Ia.&#13;
Clois Smith Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
G e rald Huldeen Odebolt, Ia.&#13;
TRUMPET&#13;
Allen Butcher Sioux City , Ia.&#13;
Keith Eide Soldier, Ia.&#13;
FRENCH HORN&#13;
Gra yson Sloan Sioux&#13;
City, Ia.&#13;
Charles Houser O'Neill,&#13;
Nebr&#13;
D on McCabe Sioux&#13;
F a lls, So. Dak.&#13;
Clark Gassman&#13;
Akron, Ia.&#13;
TROMBONE&#13;
R ex Peer Manson,&#13;
Ia.&#13;
John G r oethe, Elk Point, So. Dak.&#13;
Jay Wicker Sheldon, Ia.&#13;
Bob Lutt Oakland,Nebr&#13;
Jim Gentry Sutherland, Ia.&#13;
Joe Darwich Kingsley,&#13;
Ia .&#13;
B ARITONE&#13;
Bob Brooks Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
K en t Slocum Huron, So. Dak.&#13;
R alph Lotz Lyons, Nebr&#13;
TUBA&#13;
Rex&#13;
Conner Wayne, N ebr&#13;
John Kopecky Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
H a rold Halvorsen Storm&#13;
L ake, Ia.&#13;
Holstein, Ia.&#13;
R oy Tallman&#13;
STRING BASS&#13;
Lloyd Kreitzer Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
Charles Roberts Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
ALTO SAXOPHONE&#13;
Bill Stasch Onawa, Ia.&#13;
Elwayne Fleetwood So. Sioux City, Nebr&#13;
&#13;
PERCUSSION&#13;
Louis Israel Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
G eorge Himes&#13;
Mapleton, Ia.&#13;
S tuar t Buell Oakland, Nebr&#13;
&#13;
TENOR SAXOPHONE&#13;
Joe Bata Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
TIMPANI&#13;
Bob Niblick Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE SAXOPHONE&#13;
Ed Barnes Hawarden, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
HARP AND PIANO&#13;
Ward Swingle Sioux 'City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
* Committee&#13;
&#13;
members on personnel selec tion for the Siouxland Band.&#13;
&#13;
�BAN D&#13;
&#13;
''All-Star&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
AMERICAN SALUTE&#13;
&#13;
Gould Lang&#13;
II.&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould&#13;
&#13;
SYMPHONY FOR BAND&#13;
1. Epitaphs&#13;
2. Marches&#13;
III.&#13;
&#13;
FANTAISIE&#13;
&#13;
Francis Thome&#13;
&#13;
SOLILIQUY FOR TRUMPET&#13;
&#13;
John Morrissey&#13;
&#13;
Daniel Tetzlaff -&#13;
&#13;
Trumpet Soloist&#13;
&#13;
Leo Kucinski -&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Conductor&#13;
&#13;
INTERMISSION -&#13;
&#13;
IV.&#13;
FAMILY ALBUM SUITE&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould&#13;
&#13;
1. Old Romance&#13;
&#13;
2. Horseless Carriage Galop&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
COWBOY RHAPSODY&#13;
&#13;
Gould Bennett&#13;
&#13;
VI.&#13;
PAVANNE&#13;
&#13;
Gould Yoder&#13;
&#13;
�GRAND FINALE CONCERT&#13;
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&#13;
IOWA BANDMASTERS BAND&#13;
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Composers - Arrangers&#13;
&#13;
PHILIP LANG •&#13;
DAVID BENNETT •&#13;
&#13;
PAUL YODER&#13;
HAROLD WALTERS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM&#13;
&#13;
Sunday Evening - 8 p. m. - May 23rd - 1954&#13;
&#13;
Programs - Courtesy&#13;
SIOUX CITY MUSICIANS' ASSOCIATION&#13;
Local 254 - American Federation of Musicians&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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with the&#13;
&#13;
SIOUXLAND ''ALL-STAR'' BAND&#13;
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&#13;
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Sioux City Municipal Auditorium&#13;
Saturday Evening - 8 p. m. - May 22nd - 1954&#13;
&#13;
SIOUXLAND&#13;
FLUTE AND PICCOLO&#13;
Nathan Jones Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
Fred Eppstein Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
John Schwartz Atkinson, Nebr&#13;
Paul Bolman, Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
OBOE&#13;
Ardeen Foss Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
Bob Baxter Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
ENGLISH HORN&#13;
Ronn Veenker Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
BASSOON&#13;
Kenneth Johnson Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Jack Noble Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
Tommy Knutson Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
Eb CLARINET&#13;
Kermit Peters Remsen, Ia.&#13;
Bb CLARINET&#13;
*Robert Lowry Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
John Berigan, Lyons, Nebr&#13;
Oscar Loe Hudson, So. Dak.&#13;
Verner Herman Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
*Bill Green Storm Lake, Ia.&#13;
Albert Ocker Sioux City, I a .&#13;
Jack Lamb Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Lee McGinnis Alta, Ia.&#13;
Ira Vail LeMars, Ia.&#13;
Fred Johnson Yankton, So. Dak.&#13;
Bob Zanger Tekamah, Nebr&#13;
Mahlon Reckoff Storm Lake, Ia.&#13;
Lou Reed Spencer, Ia.&#13;
ALTO CLARINET&#13;
Bob Meloy Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Roger Hall Marcus, Ia.&#13;
BASS CLARINET&#13;
Ira Schwarz Walthill, Nebr&#13;
Dean Marshall Little Rock, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
CORNET&#13;
Karl Rogosch Akron, Iowa.&#13;
Jack Krusenstjerna Sioux City Ia.&#13;
*Ray DeVilbiss Vermillion,&#13;
So. Dak.&#13;
Norman Stafford Odebolt,&#13;
Ia.&#13;
Clois Smith Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
Gerald Huldeen Odebolt, Ia.&#13;
TRUMPET&#13;
Allen Butcher Sioux City , Ia.&#13;
Keith Eide Soldier, Ia.&#13;
FRENCH HORN&#13;
Grayson Sloan Sioux&#13;
City, Ia.&#13;
Charles Houser O'Neill,&#13;
Nebr&#13;
Don McCabe Sioux&#13;
Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
Clark Gassman&#13;
Akron, Ia.&#13;
TROMBONE&#13;
Rex Peer Manson,&#13;
Ia.&#13;
John Groethe, Elk Point, So. Dak.&#13;
Jay Wicker Sheldon, Ia.&#13;
Bob Lutt Oakland,Nebr&#13;
Jim Gentry Sutherland, Ia.&#13;
Joe Darwich Kingsley,&#13;
Ia .&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
Bob Brooks Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Kent Slocum Huron, So. Dak.&#13;
Ralph Lotz Lyons, Nebr&#13;
TUBA&#13;
Rex&#13;
Conner Wayne, Nebr&#13;
John Kopecky Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Harold Halvorsen Storm&#13;
Lake, Ia.&#13;
Holstein, Ia.&#13;
Roy Tallman&#13;
STRING BASS&#13;
Lloyd Kreitzer Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
Charles Roberts Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
ALTO SAXOPHONE&#13;
Bill Stasch Onawa, Ia.&#13;
Elwayne Fleetwood So. Sioux City, Nebr&#13;
&#13;
PERCUSSION&#13;
Louis Israel Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
George Himes&#13;
Mapleton, Ia.&#13;
Stuart Buell Oakland, Nebr&#13;
&#13;
TENOR SAXOPHONE&#13;
Joe Bata Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
TIMPANI&#13;
Bob Niblick Sioux Falls, So. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE SAXOPHONE&#13;
Ed Barnes Hawarden, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
HARP AND PIANO&#13;
Ward Swingle Sioux 'City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
* Committee&#13;
&#13;
members on personnel selection for the Siouxland Band.&#13;
&#13;
BAND&#13;
&#13;
''All-Star&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
AMERICAN SALUTE&#13;
&#13;
Gould Lang&#13;
II.&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould&#13;
&#13;
SYMPHONY FOR BAND&#13;
1. Epitaphs&#13;
2. Marches&#13;
III.&#13;
&#13;
FANTAISIE&#13;
&#13;
Francis Thome&#13;
&#13;
SOLILIQUY FOR TRUMPET&#13;
&#13;
John Morrissey&#13;
&#13;
Daniel Tetzlaff -&#13;
&#13;
Trumpet Soloist&#13;
&#13;
Leo Kucinski -&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Conductor&#13;
&#13;
INTERMISSION -&#13;
&#13;
IV.&#13;
FAMILY ALBUM SUITE&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould&#13;
&#13;
1. Old Romance&#13;
&#13;
2. Horseless Carriage Galop&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
COWBOY RHAPSODY&#13;
&#13;
Gould Bennett&#13;
&#13;
VI.&#13;
PAVANNE&#13;
&#13;
Gould Yoder&#13;
&#13;
GRAND FINALE CONCERT&#13;
with the 100 piece&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BANDMASTERS BAND&#13;
Directed by the Nationally Famous&#13;
Composers - Arrangers&#13;
&#13;
PHILIP LANG •&#13;
DAVID BENNETT •&#13;
&#13;
PAUL YODER&#13;
HAROLD WALTERS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM&#13;
&#13;
Sunday Evening - 8 p. m. - May 23rd - 1954&#13;
&#13;
Programs - Courtesy&#13;
SIOUX CITY MUSICIANS' ASSOCIATION&#13;
Local 254 - American Federation of Musicians&#13;
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                    <text>THE IOWA BANDMASTERS ASSOCIATION&#13;
Robert E. Lowry, P resident&#13;
&#13;
............................................................&#13;
...........................................................&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS&#13;
BAND CONCERT&#13;
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Composers - Arrangers&#13;
&#13;
Philip Lang&#13;
David Bennett&#13;
your&#13;
master&#13;
&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
Don Stone - KSCJ&#13;
Sunday Evening-8 o'clock-May 23rd, 1954&#13;
Sioux City Municipal Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
�Directed by the Composer, PHILIP LANG&#13;
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CARNIVAL SUITE&#13;
&#13;
P Lang&#13;
&#13;
" Off W e Go to the C arnival"&#13;
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3 " Ice Cream Cones - Cotton Candy"&#13;
4 " The Merry-Go-Round&#13;
&#13;
OUVRE TON COEUR Open Th y&#13;
&#13;
Anticipation&#13;
Participation&#13;
Intermission&#13;
Highlight&#13;
&#13;
Heart&#13;
&#13;
CIELITO LINDO Beautiful Heaven&#13;
&#13;
Bizet Lang&#13;
Fernandez Lang&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Directed by the Composer, DAVID BENNETT&#13;
GYPSY&#13;
&#13;
Gayety AGypsy Rhapsody&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
David Bennett&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
DR. TOOTLE, Ph.D&#13;
Guest Artiste Presentation&#13;
&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Tuba Soloist, John Kopecky&#13;
N arrator, Duane Tritle&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX CITY STORY Official&#13;
Centennial Son g&#13;
&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
V ocalist, Don Stone, KSCJ&#13;
&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
BYE-BYE BLUES&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
INTERMISSION -&#13;
&#13;
�I II&#13;
IBA P residential Ceremonies&#13;
Karl King&#13;
&#13;
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K. L. King, of Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
THE I-B-A MARCH&#13;
&#13;
Robert Lowry&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
PRIDE OF THE MARINES March&#13;
&#13;
Austyn Edwards&#13;
&#13;
Directed by the N ewly Elected President&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
Directed by the Composer, PAUL YODER&#13;
SKYWA YS MARCH&#13;
&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
&#13;
STATE FAIR Rogers&#13;
and Hammerstein.&#13;
&#13;
.Arr by Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Featuring " A ll I O we Ioway"&#13;
&#13;
ADVE NTURES OF PINOCCHIO Descriptive sical Story&#13;
Mu&#13;
COLORAMA A Fantasy in Color&#13;
&#13;
P Yoder&#13;
&#13;
DeRose Yoder&#13;
&#13;
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MARCH ON AMERICA&#13;
&#13;
Harold Walters&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
H. Walters&#13;
&#13;
CURTAIN AT EIGHT Show un e&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
H. Walters&#13;
&#13;
RIFF INTERLUDE This Has Got lt !&#13;
&#13;
H . Walters&#13;
&#13;
VI&#13;
ARRANGERS' HOLIDAY A&#13;
&#13;
T inkle Wrinkle&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Walters Yoder&#13;
&#13;
�We have appreciated having you, our audience, participate in the Iowa&#13;
Bandmasters' Convention Festivities. We hope that you enjoyed the Concerts&#13;
and will continue to lend your patronage to Good Band Music.&#13;
Further praise to the Sioux City Music and Record Stores for their cooperation and support in these convention activities-1954. Many thanks!&#13;
THE IOWA BANDMASTERS' ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
R. E. Lowry, President&#13;
&#13;
..........................................................&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
COURTESY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY MUSICIANS' ASSOCIATION&#13;
LOCAL254&#13;
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF MUSICIANS&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>THE IOWA BANDMASTERS ASSOCIATION&#13;
Robert E. Lowry, President&#13;
&#13;
............................................................&#13;
...........................................................&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS&#13;
BAND CONCERT&#13;
Directed by the Nationally Famous&#13;
Composers - Arrangers&#13;
&#13;
Philip Lang&#13;
David Bennett&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
Harold Walters&#13;
&#13;
your master of ceremonies&#13;
&#13;
Don Stone - KSCJ&#13;
Sunday Evening-8 o'clock-May 23rd, 1954&#13;
Sioux City Municipal Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
Directed by the Composer, PHILIP LANG&#13;
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CARNIVAL SUITE&#13;
&#13;
P Lang&#13;
&#13;
1. "Off We Go to the Carnival"&#13;
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3. "Ice Cream Cones - Cotton Candy"&#13;
4. "The Merry-Go-Round&#13;
&#13;
OUVRE TON COEUR Open Thy Heart&#13;
&#13;
Anticipation&#13;
Participation&#13;
Intermission&#13;
Highlight&#13;
&#13;
CIELITO LINDO Beautiful Heaven&#13;
&#13;
Bizet Lang&#13;
Fernandez Lang&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Directed by the Composer, DAVID BENNETT&#13;
GYPSY Gayety A Gypsy Rhapsody&#13;
&#13;
TROMBAGRAPHIC-Trombone Solo with Band&#13;
&#13;
David Bennett&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Trombone Soloist, Rex Peer&#13;
&#13;
DR. TOOTLE, Ph.D&#13;
Guest Artiste Presentation&#13;
&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Tuba Soloist, John Kopecky&#13;
Narrator, Duane Tritle&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX CITY STORY Official&#13;
Centennial Song&#13;
&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Vocalist, Don Stone, KSCJ&#13;
&#13;
D Bennett&#13;
&#13;
BYE-BYE BLUES&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
INTERMISSION -&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
IBA Presidential Ceremonies&#13;
Karl King&#13;
&#13;
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Directed by the Composer and IBA Honorary Life Member,&#13;
K. L. King, of Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
THE I-B-A MARCH&#13;
&#13;
Robert Lowry&#13;
&#13;
Directed by the Immediate Past-President&#13;
&#13;
PRIDE OF THE MARINES March&#13;
&#13;
Austyn Edwards&#13;
&#13;
Directed by the Newly Elected President&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
Directed by the Composer, PAUL YODER&#13;
SKYWAYS MARCH&#13;
&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
&#13;
STATE FAIR Rogers&#13;
and Hammerstein.&#13;
&#13;
.Arr by Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Featuring " All I Owe Ioway"&#13;
&#13;
ADVENTURES OF PINOCCHIO Descriptive Musical Story&#13;
COLORAMA A Fantasy in Color&#13;
&#13;
P Yoder&#13;
&#13;
DeRose Yoder&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
Directed by the Composer, HAROLD WALTERS&#13;
MARCH ON AMERICA&#13;
&#13;
Harold Walters&#13;
&#13;
LA MASCARADA Paso Doble&#13;
&#13;
H. Walters&#13;
&#13;
CURTAIN AT EIGHT Show Tune&#13;
&#13;
H. Walters&#13;
&#13;
RIFF INTERLUDE This Has Got lt!&#13;
&#13;
H . Walters&#13;
&#13;
VI&#13;
ARRANGERS' HOLIDAY &#13;
A Tinkle Wrinkle&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Walters Yoder&#13;
&#13;
We have appreciated having you, our audience, participate in the Iowa&#13;
Bandmasters' Convention Festivities. We hope that you enjoyed the Concerts&#13;
and will continue to lend your patronage to Good Band Music.&#13;
Further praise to the Sioux City Music and Record Stores for their cooperation and support in these convention activities-1954. Many thanks!&#13;
THE IOWA BANDMASTERS' ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
R. E. Lowry, President&#13;
&#13;
..........................................................&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
COURTESY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY MUSICIANS' ASSOCIATION&#13;
LOCAL254&#13;
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF MUSICIANS&#13;
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                    <text>EighthAnnual&#13;
Mid-west&#13;
&#13;
National Band Clinic&#13;
1 5,&#13;
&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
&#13;
1 6,&#13;
&#13;
1 7,&#13;
&#13;
1 8,&#13;
&#13;
1 9 5 4&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
SHERMAN HOTEL&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIAL&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1954&#13;
&#13;
6:00 P.M.&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
Registrationon Mezzanine Floor&#13;
UnitedStates Air Force Band&#13;
GrandBallroom (Page 7)&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.&#13;
Cass&#13;
11 :00 A.M.&#13;
"How&#13;
&#13;
1: 15&#13;
3:00&#13;
&#13;
4:00&#13;
&#13;
5:30&#13;
8:00&#13;
8:45&#13;
9 : 15&#13;
&#13;
Technical High School Band of Detroit&#13;
GrandBallroom (Page 9)&#13;
Would a High School Bandsman Pass An Armed Forces Band Inspection"&#13;
Lt. Col, S. E. Mear, U. S. A. , Retired Grand Ballroom.&#13;
Chairman, Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Percussion Ensemble under the sup e rvision of Robert Buggert, University of Wichita&#13;
Chairman, Haskell Harr, VanderCook College&#13;
Louis XVI Room (Take Stairway&#13;
Upone Flight)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
North&#13;
Chicago Grade School Band&#13;
GrandBallroom (Page 11)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Rehearsal Techniques" Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin Grand&#13;
Ballroom. Ensemble from CYO Band of Chicago, Ralph J. Meltzer, Director,&#13;
Thomas Fabish, CYO Music Supervisor&#13;
Chairman, Clarence Sawhill, University of California&#13;
Trombone-Baritone Clinic, Hugh McMillen, University of Colorado&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
Chairman , Harold Bachman, University of Florida&#13;
P.M.&#13;
"The&#13;
Percussion Section Accessories"&#13;
Haskell Harr, VanderCook College&#13;
Grand&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
Chairman,William Ludwig, Jr., Chicago&#13;
"Fund Raising" Panel&#13;
Lyle Atkins, Carthage; James Keith, Pekin; F. C. Kreider,&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
Collinsville&#13;
Moderator,F. C. Kreider&#13;
P.M.VanderCook&#13;
College Reunion&#13;
P.M.&#13;
GreensboroSenior High School Band&#13;
GrandBallroom (Page 13)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Adjudication School" at Intermission of Greensboro Band Concert&#13;
GrandBallroom&#13;
Adjudicators: Harold Bachman, William D. Revelli , Clarence Sawhill&#13;
P.M.&#13;
GreensboroConcert Continued&#13;
GrandBallroom&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1954&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.&#13;
10:00&#13;
&#13;
11 :00&#13;
&#13;
l :30&#13;
3:30&#13;
&#13;
4:30&#13;
5:30&#13;
8:00&#13;
8:45&#13;
9:30&#13;
&#13;
Cornet-TrumpetClinic&#13;
DonJacoby, Staff Trumpeter with A. B. C. Grand Ballroom&#13;
Chairman, Howard Lyons, Chicago&#13;
A.M.&#13;
Brass and Reed Ensembles from the Muskegon, Michigan, H. S. Band William&#13;
Stewart, Director&#13;
GrandBallroom&#13;
"Band Parents Associations and Their Functions" Panel: Paul Deland, Vice-President,&#13;
Pekin Grade School Band Parents; Rober1 Baldwin, President, Maine Township&#13;
H. S. Band Boosters; Charles Thompson, President, East Aurora Band Boosters&#13;
Moderator&#13;
HowardLyons, Chicago&#13;
LouisXVI Room (Take Stairway&#13;
UpOne Flight)&#13;
A.M.&#13;
"New&#13;
Sounds from the Band"&#13;
HaroldW'a lters, Narrator&#13;
GrandBallroom&#13;
Chairman, H. E. Nutt, Vandercook College&#13;
Saxophone Clinic&#13;
SigurdRascher, Shushan, New York&#13;
LouisXVI Room&#13;
Chairman, Miss Bessie Barnes, VanderCook College&#13;
P.M.&#13;
DavenportHigh School Band&#13;
GrandBallroom (Page 15)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Brass and Reed Ensembles from the Beloit, Wisconsin , H. S. Band&#13;
Don Cuthbert,&#13;
Director&#13;
GrandBallroom&#13;
"How To Do 'This and That' Better" H. E. Nutt, VanderCook College&#13;
Louis XVI&#13;
Room&#13;
Chairman, Charles Peters, Joliet Grade Schools&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Clarinet&#13;
Clinic- Robert E. Lowry, Morningside College&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
Chairman, Forrest McAllister, Editor, The School Musician&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Modern&#13;
Music Masters Installation&#13;
LouisXVI Room&#13;
P.M.&#13;
VanderCookCollege Band&#13;
GrandBallroom (Page 17)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Style&#13;
Show of Band Uniforms&#13;
GrandBallroom. Planned and Produced by George&#13;
Myers, Portage Township Senior H. S. , Gary, Indiana&#13;
P.M.&#13;
VanderCook College Concert Continued&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1954&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.&#13;
11 :00 A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Kiel Municipal Band&#13;
GrandBallroom (Page 19)&#13;
The Band of the Royal Canadian Air Force Training Command&#13;
GrandBallroom&#13;
(Page 21)&#13;
1:00 P. M. - Grand Finale Banquet&#13;
Bal Tabarin (6th Floor&#13;
Take Elevator from same Floor as&#13;
Grand Ballroom at close of R. C. A. F. Concert)&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak&#13;
Banquet Speaker&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Conductor, Goldman Band, New&#13;
York City&#13;
Price One Dollar&#13;
Official Program and Information Handbook&#13;
Please Bring Your Program to All Sessions&#13;
OneCopy Only Is Free To Each Registered Guest&#13;
&#13;
Lowry Clarinet Clinic&#13;
&#13;
�Raymond F. Dvorak&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
&#13;
Lee W. Petersen&#13;
Exec .&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Nutt&#13;
VanderCook College&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Howard Lyons&#13;
Lyons Band&#13;
&#13;
Your Hosts Welcome You&#13;
To The 8th Annual&#13;
&#13;
Mid-West National Band Clinic&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
Tribute To Sousa&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
IN THE CENTENNIA L YEAR OF HIS BIRTH&#13;
&#13;
1854-1954&#13;
&#13;
William Lyons&#13;
Lyons Band&#13;
&#13;
C. L. McCreery&#13;
Lyons Band&#13;
&#13;
CONTRIBUTORS&#13;
We wish to gratefully acknowledge the generous suppo rt of the following contributors who have&#13;
helped make possible this Eighth Annual Mid-West National Band Clinic.&#13;
W. T. Armstrong Company, Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
Oskaloosa, la.&#13;
Buescher Band Instrument Co. , Elkhart, In d .&#13;
Chicago Musical Instrument Co ., 30 E. Adams,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Down Beat, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Educational Music Bureau , 30 E. Adams,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Carl Fischer, Inc. , 306 So. Wabash, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barnhouse,&#13;
&#13;
Gamble Hinged Music Co., 312 So. Wabash ,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Fred Gretch Manufacturing Co., 218 So. Wabash,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Frank Holton Co., 326 No. Church Street,&#13;
Elkhorn , Wis .&#13;
Humes &amp; Berg, Inc. , 148th St. &amp; Railroad Ave.,&#13;
East Chicago, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
Kay Musical Instrument Co., 1640 Walnut,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Neil A. Kjos Music Co., 223 W. Lake St.,&#13;
Chicago , Ill.&#13;
G. LeBlanc Co., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Martin Band Instrument Co., Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
The Pedler Co., Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
Penzel Mueller &amp; Co., Inc., 36-11 Thirty-third St.,&#13;
Long Island City, N. Y.&#13;
Reynolds Band Instrument Co., 2845 Prospect,&#13;
Cleveland, 0.&#13;
Rubank , Inc. , 5544 W. Armstrong, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Scherl &amp; Roth, 2845 Prospect, Cleveland, O.&#13;
H. &amp; A. Selmer, Inc., Elkhart, Ind .&#13;
Slingerland Drum Co., 1325 Belden Ave. ,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Targ &amp; Dinner, 425 So. Wabash, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
W. F. L. Drum Co ., 1728 No. Darnen , Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Companies sponsoring the Band Uniform Style Show and Hosts of the Grand Finale Luncheon ,&#13;
Saturday, Complimentary to Directors attending the Clinic, to whom a special Th ank You is extended :&#13;
The Craddock Uniforms, 1211 Grand Avenue, Kansas City 6, Missouri&#13;
De Mo u lin Bros, &amp; Co., Greenville, Illinoi s&#13;
Fruh auf Southwest Uniform Company, 312 E. English St., Wichi ta , Kansas&#13;
Stanbury &amp; Company, 720 Delawa re St. , Kansas City 6 , Missouri&#13;
We wish to extend our thanks to the following men who have given much information a.nd advice&#13;
in perfecting the pages of this Official Handbook of Materials: Rodney K. Cummings of Educational&#13;
Music Bureau; Nick King of Carl Fischer, Inc.; and Gene Gamble of Gamble Hing ed Music Co. We also&#13;
acknowledge the valuable contribution of Mr. George Myers and his Models of the Portage Township&#13;
Senior High School of Gary, Indian a, in preparing and presenting the Uniform Style Show.&#13;
LYONS BAND INSTRUMENT CO.&#13;
VANDERCOOK COL LEGE OF MUS IC&#13;
MEN-PLEASE CHECK YOUR WRAPS&#13;
maximum seating capacity at all times.&#13;
&#13;
Page two&#13;
&#13;
We ask this in order to insure the comfort of all and the&#13;
&#13;
�MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1954&#13;
&#13;
George Myers&#13;
Portage Twp. Senior&#13;
H. S., Gary, Ind.&#13;
"Style Show"&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko&#13;
Goldman, Goldman&#13;
Band, N. Y. City .&#13;
"Banquet Speaker"&#13;
&#13;
S. E. Mear&#13;
Lt. Col. U. S. A. Ret.&#13;
"Band Inspection"&#13;
&#13;
Harold Bachman&#13;
University of&#13;
Florida&#13;
"Adjudication&#13;
School"&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Sawhill&#13;
University of&#13;
California&#13;
"Adjudication&#13;
School"&#13;
&#13;
Wm D. Revelli&#13;
University of&#13;
Michigan&#13;
"Adjudication&#13;
School"&#13;
&#13;
Organizations Which Have Appeared at the Mid-West Clinics&#13;
&#13;
1947-1953&#13;
&#13;
Barrie Collegiate Institute Band Barrie, Ontario, Canada W. Allen Fisher, Director 1952.&#13;
Beaumont Cougar Band Beaumont, California John Shafer, Director 1953.&#13;
Brownsville, Texas, High School Band James R. Murphy, Director 1950, 1952.&#13;
Catholic Youth Organization Band of Chicago Thomas F. Fabish, Director 1948, 1949.&#13;
Christian Brothers High School Band of Memphis, Tennessee Ralph G. Hale, Director 1951.&#13;
Cresbard, South Dakota, High School Band William E. Klitz, Director 1953.&#13;
Hobart, Indiana, High School Band Richard Worthington, Director 1948, 1949.&#13;
Joliet Grade School Band Charles&#13;
Peters, Director 1948.&#13;
Joliet Township High School Band Bruce Houseknecht, Director&#13;
1947, 1949.&#13;
H.C.&#13;
Wegner, Director 1951.&#13;
Lutheran High School Choir of Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Mason City, Iowa , High School Band&#13;
Paul W. Behm, Director 1952.&#13;
Miami, Florida, Senior High School Band Al G. Wright, Director 1951.&#13;
Michigan City, Indiana, Grade School Band Fred Weber, Director 1950.&#13;
Muskegon, Michigan, High School Band William Stewart, Director 1950.&#13;
Muskegon, Michigan, High School Orchestra William Stewart, Director 1952.&#13;
McAllister Memorial Band of the American Legion Joliet, Illinois A. R. McAllister, Jr., Director 1953.&#13;
Oxford, Michigan, High School Band Kenneth Bovee, Director 1951.&#13;
Pla infie ld Grade School Band William Johnston , Director 1951 .&#13;
Sterling Grade School Band Cloyd Meyers, Director 1952.&#13;
Territorial Staff Band of the Chicago Salvation Army Captain Bernard Smith, Director 1950, 1951 , 1953.&#13;
United States Air Force Band Wash in gton, D. C. Colonel George S. Howard, Director 1953.&#13;
VanderCook College of Music Band of Chicago Richard Brittain, Director 1947 through 1953.&#13;
Waukegan Grade School Band Bernard H. Stiner, Director 1953.&#13;
West Aurora High School Mixed Chorus Sten Halfvarson , Director 1950.&#13;
Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin, High School Band Roger Hornig, Director 1952.&#13;
Worthington, Minnesota, High School Band Ge rald Niemeyer, Director 1953.&#13;
Page three&#13;
&#13;
�MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1954&#13;
&#13;
F. C. Kreider&#13;
Collinsville&#13;
&#13;
James Keith&#13;
Pekin&#13;
&#13;
''Fund&#13;
&#13;
Robert W. Buggert&#13;
University of&#13;
Wichita, Kansas&#13;
"Percussion&#13;
Ensemble"&#13;
&#13;
Raising''&#13;
&#13;
Hugh McMillen&#13;
University of&#13;
Colorado&#13;
"TromboneBaritone"&#13;
&#13;
Haskell Harr&#13;
VanderCook College&#13;
"Percussion&#13;
Accessories"&#13;
&#13;
MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1947-1953&#13;
Robert Abbott, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Baton Twirling, 1948.&#13;
Directors'Panel , 1953.&#13;
Lyle Atkins, Carthage, Illinois, Public Schools&#13;
Alfred Barthe l, Former Member Chicago Symphony Orchestra Oboe, 1950.&#13;
John Beckerman, VanderCook College Flute, 1948, 1950, 1951 , 1953.&#13;
C. W. Bemer, Superintendent of Schools, Muskegon, Michigan Administrators'&#13;
Panel, 1952.&#13;
T. R. Bowman, Principal , Barrie Collegiate Institute, Ontario, Canada Administrators' Panel, 1952.&#13;
Richard Brittain, Vande rCook College Clarinet, 1948, 1949.&#13;
Forrest Buchtel, VanderCook College Unusual Instruments, 1949.&#13;
Eugene Carrington, All ied Radio Corporation, Chicago&#13;
BinauralRecordings, 1952.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Cerminaro, Orange, Texas Bengal Debs Popu lar Orchestra, 1953.&#13;
Don Cuthbe rt, Beloit, Wisconsin, High School Marching Band, 1949.&#13;
Roscoe Davis, DeMoulin Bros. &amp; Co., Greenville, Illinois Style Show, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Master Ceremonies, 1947, 1948, 1950 through 1953.&#13;
of&#13;
Raymond F. Dvorak, Un iversity of Wisconsin&#13;
Alvin Edgar, Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa Marching Band, 1948.&#13;
Ronald J. Elliott, Switzer Bros., Cleveland, Ohio Fluorescent Lighting, 1951.&#13;
Tom Fabish , CYO Band, Chicago, Illinois Saxophone, Marching Band, 1948, 1951.&#13;
L. Fruhauf, Fruhauf Southwest Uniform Co., Wichita, Kansas Sty le Show, 1952.&#13;
James Gross, Urbana, Il linois, High School Oboe, 1948.&#13;
Haskell Harr, VanderCook College Percussion, 1948, 1949, 1951.&#13;
Arthur Harrell, Supervisor of Music, Wichita , Kansas Forum, 1951.&#13;
Marching&#13;
Band and "Tune As You Play", 1948, 1952.&#13;
Mark Hindsle y, University of Illinois&#13;
Norman Hinkley, Portage, Wisconsin, High School Directors' Panel , 1953.&#13;
Robert Hoffman, Goldman Band, New York City Clarinet, 1953.&#13;
Marguerite Hood, Past President MENC Forum, 1951.&#13;
Indiana Clarinet, 1950.&#13;
Nilo Hovey, Jordan Conservatory, Indianapolis&#13;
Colonel George S. Howard, Conductor, U. S. Air Force Band, Wash ington, D. C. Speaker, 1953.&#13;
David Hughes, Jordan Conservatory, Indianapol is, Indiana Orchestra, 1950.&#13;
Arnold Jacobs, Chicago Symphony Orchestra Bass, 1952.&#13;
Stefan Jones, High School, Miami, Florida Marching Band, 1950.&#13;
Lawrence Johnston, Bosse High School , Evansville, Indiana Marching Band, 1949.&#13;
William Johnston, Pla infield, Illinois, Publ ic Schools Directors' Pa nel, 1953.&#13;
John Kendall , American Music Confe rence, Chicago&#13;
Forum, 1951 .&#13;
Everett Kessinger, University of Illinois&#13;
Marching&#13;
Band, 1953.&#13;
T. Howard Krueger, El mhurst College, Illinois&#13;
Trombone Baritone, 1952.&#13;
Sam Lantz, Fechheimer Bros. Co., Cincinnati, Ohio Style Show, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Jesse L. Lasky, Pioneer Hollywood Mov ie Producer Speaker, 1952.&#13;
Jack K. L&#13;
ee, University of Arizona, Tucson Marching Band, 1952.&#13;
eeson, Cary, Illinois Saxophone,&#13;
1949.&#13;
Cecil L&#13;
Clifford P. Lillya, Un iversity of Michigan Clinician, 1947.&#13;
Page four&#13;
&#13;
�MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1954&#13;
&#13;
Don Jacoby&#13;
Staff Trumpeter&#13;
With A. B. C.&#13;
Cornet-Trumpet&#13;
&#13;
R. E. Lowry&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
"Clarinet&#13;
&#13;
Harold Walters&#13;
Composer&#13;
&#13;
"New Sounds"&#13;
&#13;
William Stewart&#13;
Muskegon, Mich .&#13;
&#13;
Don Cuthbert&#13;
Beloit, Wisconsin&#13;
Sigurd Rascher&#13;
Shushan, N . Y.&#13;
"Saxophone"&#13;
&#13;
'' Brass&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Reed&#13;
&#13;
Ensembles"&#13;
&#13;
MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1947-1953&#13;
W. F. Ludwig , Jr., W. F. L. Drum Co., Chicago Percuss ion, 1948, 1949, 1952.&#13;
W. F. Ludwig, Sr., W. F. L. Dru m Co., Chicago&#13;
Percussion, 1948, 1949, 1952.&#13;
Howard Lyons, Lyons Band Instrument Co. , Chicago Clin ic ian , 1947 through 1953.&#13;
Cornet-Trumpet, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Rafael Mendez Trumpet Virtuoso, Mexico and Hollywood&#13;
Forrest McAllister, Ed itor " Th e Schoo l Musician"- Clinician, 1949, 195 1.&#13;
C. L. McCreery, Lyons Band In strument Co., Chicago- Saxophone and Cla rinet, 1948, 1949, 1951.&#13;
Hugh McMillen, University of Co lorado, Boulder&#13;
Trombone-Baritone,&#13;
1950, 195 1.&#13;
Vernon Nicke ll , Superintendent of Public In stru ction, Springfie ld, Illinois- Forum , 1951.&#13;
H. E. Nutt, VanderCook College, Chicago&#13;
Clinician, 1947 thro ugh 1953.&#13;
Ernest Ostwald, Uniforms by Ostwa ld , Staten Island, New York&#13;
Style Show, 1953.&#13;
Harry Peters, Fredonia, New York, State College&#13;
DoubleReeds, 1953.&#13;
ee&#13;
L W. Petersen, Executive Secretary, Mid-West Nationa l Band Clini c, 1947 th rough 1953.&#13;
Frank Piersol , Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa Marching Band , 195 1.&#13;
Clarinet, 1948, 195 1.&#13;
Lillian Poenisch, VanderCook Co ll ege, Chicago&#13;
Reid Pool e, University of Fl o rida, Gainesvill e, Florida French Horn, 1948.&#13;
Max Pottag, Former Member, Chicago Symphony Orchestra French Horn, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1953.&#13;
Dr. Sigfred Prager, Unive rsity of Wisconsi n, Madison&#13;
Speaker, 1947.&#13;
Sigurd Rascher, Shushan, New York&#13;
Saxophone, 1951, 1952.&#13;
Will iam D. Re ve lli , Unive rsity of Michigan, Ann Arbor&#13;
Clinician 1951 , 1952, 1953.&#13;
O. H. Robe rts, Attorney, Evansvi ll e, Indiana&#13;
Speaker, 1949.&#13;
Haro ld Rog ers, Valparaiso, Indiana, Hi gh School Director of Style Show, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Traugott Rohner, Editor, " Th e lnstrumentalist"&#13;
Mar imba, 195 1.&#13;
Robert Rosevear, University of Toron to, Canada Fre nch Horn, 1951.&#13;
Acoustics,1951.&#13;
Ha le J. Sabine, Celotex Corp.&#13;
Don Sartel l, Editor, " Th e Drum Major" Baton Twirling , 1948.&#13;
La wrence Shepoiser, Superintenden t of Schoo ls, Mason City, Iowa Administrators' Pane l, 1952.&#13;
Dr. Frank Simon, Midd leton, Ohio Cornet, 1948, 1949.&#13;
L&#13;
eonard B. Smith, Detroit, Michigan&#13;
Cornet-Trumpet,&#13;
1950, 1951.&#13;
Hobart Sommers, Assistant Superintendent, Chicago Public Schools Speake r, 1948.&#13;
William Stanbury, Stanbury &amp; Co ., Kansas City, Missouri Style Show, 1953.&#13;
Wi lliam Stewart, Muskegon, Michigan, High School&#13;
MarchingBand, 1949, 1950.&#13;
Gilbert Waller, Unive rsity of Ill inois, Urbana O rchest ra, 1952.&#13;
George Waln, Oberlin College, Ohio&#13;
Clarinet,1949.&#13;
Forum,1951.&#13;
Fred Webe r, Public Schools, Michigan City, Indiana&#13;
Wi lliam W ill e tt, State College, Fredonia , New York&#13;
Clarinet, 1952.&#13;
Albe rt Willis Executive Secretary, Illinois H. S. Association&#13;
Administrators' Pane l, 1952.&#13;
Al G. Wright, Purdu e University, Indiana Marching&#13;
Band, 1950.&#13;
Beulah Zander, State Supervisor of Mus ic, Springfield, Illinois Forum,&#13;
195 1.&#13;
Avedis Zildjian Percussion, 1950.&#13;
Pa ge five&#13;
&#13;
�THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE BAND&#13;
&#13;
COLONEL GEORGE S. HOWARD, Director&#13;
&#13;
Colonel&#13;
George S. Howard&#13;
&#13;
The United States Air Force Band is a musical organization with an unsurpassed record of accomplishment&#13;
Organized in June, 1942, it has in a brief twelve years achieved a pos- tion unique in musical&#13;
i&#13;
circles and has captured the fancy and the imagination of music lovers of four continents.&#13;
High on the list of its notable achievements is the phenomenal success which it has enjoyed in the&#13;
role of a good-will ambassador. Pioneering in a theory that a musical organization could become an&#13;
ideal ambassador of a nation, the success with which its five international tours have met is nothing&#13;
short of spectacular.&#13;
The interest taken in these concerts by foreign nations is unparalleled. On some of these occasions,&#13;
the U. S. A. F. Band plays before more people in a single performance than many a musical organization&#13;
does in a period of two years. More astonish ing is the fact that these appearances have been proven&#13;
to be all-time prize crowd-gatherers exceeding any previous event regardless of its nature or magnitude.&#13;
These history breaking attendances have occurred in practically every one of the twenty six countries&#13;
in which the band has appeared. This has occasioned some sources to remark that the stadium that the&#13;
U. S. A. F. Band couldn't fill has yet to be bu ilt. Of much more importance, however, is the fact that&#13;
these concerts are met with an unduplicated e nthusiasm that is reflected in popular, official and&#13;
critical acclaim.&#13;
Stressing versatility, the U. S. A. F. Band is ONE organization that is capable of resolving itself into&#13;
a l 00-piece marching band, a 90-piece symphony orchestra, an 85-piece symphonic band, a 25-voice&#13;
glee club (the "Singing Sergeants"), 5 dance bands (including the "Airmen of Note" and the "Crew&#13;
Chiefs") and numerous chamber and instrumental groups. Versatility is further accented from a musical&#13;
performance standpoint inasmuch as the organization does not subscribe to the widespread belief that&#13;
a musical unit had to be either "long hair" or "jazz". It performs any given type of music with the&#13;
highest professional standard and presents programs that are designed to satisfy every appetite from&#13;
"opera" to "be-bop" from "symphony" to "swing".&#13;
Its membership has been hand-picked as the result of auditioning more than 1,400 professional&#13;
musicians. Those selected came from a wide variety of musical organizations ranging from the Philadelphia&#13;
Orchestra to the Honolulu Symphony, from the Tommy Dorsey dance band to the Arthur Pryor concert&#13;
band. Collectively, they are former members of 20 different symphony orchestras and 16 "name" dance&#13;
bands.&#13;
Frequently referred to as a "Symphony In The Sky", this colorful aggregation has presented its&#13;
internationally accla imed art in North America, Europe, Africa and Asia. It has concertized before a total&#13;
of 10,000,000 people in the United States, Canada, England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Germany, Austria,&#13;
France, Belgium, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Denmark, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, Egypt, Libya,&#13;
French Morocco, Iceland, Newfoundland, Labrador, Trieste, Tangier and The Azores. Probably the world's&#13;
most travelled musical organization, it has appeared in 19 World capitals, Washington, Ottawa, London,&#13;
Paris, Berlin, Rome, Vienna, Brussels, Dublin, Athens, Glasgow, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Luxembourg,&#13;
Ankara, Beirut, Cairo, Reykjavik and Rabat.&#13;
It has played to l 00,000 people nightly for 17 consecutive nights at Chicago's Soldier Field. At&#13;
Toronto's Exh ibition Grounds it played to 50,000 people daily for 34 days. The U. S. A. F. Band had an&#13;
audience of 130,000 people at Berlin's Olympic Stadium, 175,000 people at New York's ldlewild Airport&#13;
while at Soesterburg, Holland it played to a record breaking 250,000 people. It holds additional&#13;
attendance records at London's Royal Festival Hall, Edinburgh's Princess Gate Gardens, Dublin's Theatre&#13;
Royal, Glasgow's Green's Playhouse, Copenhagen's Tivoli Gardens, Chester (Wales) City Square,&#13;
Trieste's San Giusto Castle, Luxembourg's Place D'Armes, Bordeaux' J ardin Publ ique, Nurnburg's Hau pt&#13;
Marktplatz, Linz' Hauptplatz, Passau's Nibelungen Hall, Heidelberg's Thingstaette, Chaumont's Stade&#13;
Voltaire, Nancy's Jardin Publique, Beirut's Hippodrome, Cairo's Republic Square, Bonn's Stadtpark,&#13;
Regensburg's RT Field, Stuttgart's Palace Square, Wiesbaden's Kurpark, Tangier's Marshan Stad ium and&#13;
Washington's Capitol Plaza.&#13;
Having the distinction of being the only American musical organ ization privileged to play for the&#13;
Royal Garden Party at Buckingham Palace, the United States Air Force Band was also honored by Mr.&#13;
Leopold Stokowski who presented it with his personal band library on January 8, 1954. The USAF&#13;
Band's precision, versatility, interpretation and genuinely human appeal has made it a sensation&#13;
wherever it appears.&#13;
Page six&#13;
&#13;
�WEDNESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 15, 1954&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE BAND&#13;
Colonel George S. Howard, Conductor&#13;
Warrant Officer Harry H. Meuser, Assistant Conductor&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1892&#13;
&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1945&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficu lt&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1931&#13;
&#13;
Difficu lt&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
&#13;
1929&#13;
&#13;
Med ium&#13;
&#13;
Schirmer&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
191 3&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
Mediu m&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
Fische r&#13;
&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
1937&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficu lt&#13;
&#13;
Mi lls&#13;
&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Chu rch&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1897&#13;
&#13;
Difficu lt&#13;
&#13;
Overture Coriolan (4101)&#13;
&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Fischer&#13;
L&#13;
eoncavallo&#13;
arr. Cray&#13;
Vocal Solo Prologue (Pagliacci) (4 102)&#13;
Schirmer&#13;
M/ Sgt. William Jones, Ba rito ne Soloist&#13;
L&#13;
egend (4103)&#13;
Creston&#13;
L&#13;
eeds&#13;
*Cuban Fantasy (4104)&#13;
Kepner&#13;
Summy&#13;
1. Native Dance&#13;
2. The Sea&#13;
3. Havana Te rrace&#13;
The Singing Sergeants (4 105)&#13;
Lt. Robert L. L nde rs, Director&#13;
a&#13;
Medley of American Favorites&#13;
arr. Genuchi&#13;
Rodgers&#13;
With A Song In My Heart&#13;
arr. Werle&#13;
Harms&#13;
M/ Sgt. Will iam J o nes, Baritone Soloist&#13;
Elkan&#13;
Bolero (4106)&#13;
Vogel&#13;
Ravel&#13;
&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
INTERMISSION&#13;
Princess J aune (4107)&#13;
&#13;
St. Saens&#13;
Verdi&#13;
Voca l Solo LaDonna E. Mobi le (4108)&#13;
a rr. Werle&#13;
S/ Sgt. William DuPree, Te nor Solo ist&#13;
&#13;
Overture&#13;
&#13;
Pierne&#13;
&#13;
Ma rch of the Little L&#13;
eaden Soldiers (4109) arr. Beeler&#13;
A Feat for Clarinets Dizzy Fingers (4110) Confrey&#13;
Pe rkins&#13;
Two Contemporary Dances&#13;
arr. Werle&#13;
*&#13;
a. Fandango (4111 )&#13;
b. Russian Sa ilors Dance (411 2)&#13;
Gliere&#13;
Anderson&#13;
arr. Werle&#13;
*The Typewrite r (4113)&#13;
M/ Sgt. Edward Grace, Typewriter Soloist&#13;
A Bit of American Jazz&#13;
Hill&#13;
Gre mlins Ball (4114)&#13;
March The Sta rs and Stripes&#13;
Forever (411 5)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
A Sa lute To The Armed Forces&#13;
arr. Cray&#13;
of the United States (4 116)&#13;
&#13;
Qu ickstep&#13;
&#13;
Difficu lt&#13;
&#13;
The Star Spang led Banne r&#13;
Me mber, The United States Air Force Band.&#13;
* Numbers ma rked (*) a re 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 thro ugh 3 1.&#13;
Every numbe r of all e ig ht bands wi ll be recorded by the "On The Spot Recording Co." Directors&#13;
interested in buying any of these recordings may le ave their orders at the "On The Spot Recording Co."&#13;
booth in the Display Are a o utside the Gra nd Ballroom. Recordings w il l be mail ed about January 15.&#13;
Grade and Hig h School Stude nts Not Admitted Until 5 Minutes Before Conce rt Beg ins.&#13;
Page seve n&#13;
&#13;
�MUSIC AT CASS TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
1919-1954&#13;
&#13;
HARRY BEGIAN, Director of Bands&#13;
&#13;
Harry Begian&#13;
&#13;
The Cass Technical High School Concert Band of Detroit, Michigan is an integral part of one of the&#13;
most complete music curriculums in the United States. Members of this band attend a high school for&#13;
specialists in science, mechanics and arts. Although most of the Concert Band members are Music&#13;
Department majors, twenty-two are from other departments through-out the school. An education at&#13;
Cass Technical High School is geared to: (1) train the student in his specialty so that he may pursue it&#13;
upon graduation from Cass, and (2) meet all pre-requisites for college entrance. This two-fold preparation&#13;
for work or college is rather unique, and therefore Cass attracts a serious type of student. Any high&#13;
school student in Detroit having a C or better scholarship record may choose to attend Cass Technical&#13;
High School.&#13;
The music program at Cass, started in 1919 by Mr. Clarence Byrn, was hailed as being far ahead&#13;
of its time. At its inception it was a four-year vocational music program designed to prepare students&#13;
for the many jobs then available in the playing field . During this era many Cass graduates joined the&#13;
professional music ranks and to this day hold envious positions in symphony orchestras, concert bands,&#13;
radio, and dance bands. At present there are fourteen members of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra who&#13;
are Cass alumni.&#13;
Sound movies and the coming of age of radio and the recording industry eliminated many of the&#13;
musical job opportunities, and it was then that the Cass Music Curriculum was changed to meet the&#13;
needs of the times. No longer was the stress towards preparing the student for the performing field&#13;
primarily, but toward securing a college preparatory diploma with special emphasis in music. This was&#13;
a realistic step toward preparing graduates for music job opportunities which seemed to be, and still&#13;
are to be found in the public and private music-teaching fields. Mr. Glenn L. Klepinger, who succeeded&#13;
Mr. Byrn as Cass Music Department Head, has been largely responsible for carrying on and further&#13;
directing this realistic approach to music job opportunities.&#13;
Students now entering Cass must pass qualifying tests in their major field, and are classified as a&#13;
String, Wind, Percussion, Piano, Harp or Vocal Major. If a student performs well enough upon entrance&#13;
into the music department, he is assigned to one of the large ensembles. Ensembles at Cass are grouped&#13;
into two categories, performing and training. The Concert Band, Symphony Orchestra, A Capella Choir&#13;
and Harp and Vocal are of the former type, while Varsity Band, Beginning Orchestra, Reserve Band, Boys&#13;
Chorus and Girls Glee Club are of the latter. Where interests of the students coincide, small ensembles are&#13;
formed which meet once a week after school.&#13;
The band gives two formal concerts each year, and features outstanding guest and student soloists on&#13;
each . The orchestra and choir also give their own concerts. All revenue from concerts goes toward&#13;
department maintenance; however, the proceeds from this year's Band Concert have helped finance the&#13;
band's appearance at the Mid-West National Band Clinic.&#13;
Although 75% of the members of the Cass Band study privately on their instruments, it is interesting&#13;
to note that twenty-seven members have only been playing since coming to Cass in the tenth grade.&#13;
Of the five double-reed players, only one had played her particular instrument before the tenth grade,&#13;
and only five of the nine flutists had any flute playing experience prior to their entrance to Cass.&#13;
Department requirements for graduation from the oresent three-year music curriculum include one&#13;
year of musical elements, piano, voice, and harmony. Also, the student must for one year study a minor&#13;
instrument, take a course in elementary arranging, and meet all pre-requisites for college entrance.&#13;
Harry Begian has been Director of Bands at Cass since 1947. Prior to that he directed the MacKenzie&#13;
High School Band of Detroit and was for one year a special instructor in the Band Department of Wayne&#13;
University in Detroit, Michigan. Mr. Begian has appeared with the Cass Band at the University of Michigan&#13;
Band Conductor's Workshops for 1952 and 1953, and has for the past two summers been a member of&#13;
the Summer Music Faculty of Wayne University. He has appeared as adjudicator, guest conductor, and&#13;
clinician in his native state of Michigan, and is a charter member of the ASBDA and Gamma Omicron&#13;
Chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. In addition to directing the Concert Band at Cass, Mr. Begian also&#13;
directs the Marching and Varsity Bands and teaches classes in Wind Instruments and Elementary Arranging.&#13;
Page eight&#13;
&#13;
�THURSDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
9:00-10:45 A.M.&#13;
&#13;
CLINIC CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
CASS TECHN ICAL HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
Harry Begian, Director&#13;
&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
.PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Ha il Detroit (4201)&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bandland&#13;
&#13;
Q uickstep&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Traue rsinfonie (4202)&#13;
&#13;
Wagner&#13;
&#13;
Associated&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Rossini&#13;
&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (4205)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Fox&#13;
W illiam D. Revel li, University of Michigan, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Q uickstep&#13;
&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Toccata and Fugue in D Minor (4206)&#13;
&#13;
Bach&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Pavane for a Dead Princess (4207)&#13;
&#13;
Ravel&#13;
&#13;
Weaner&#13;
L&#13;
evant&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Schuman&#13;
&#13;
Schirmer&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Me dium&#13;
&#13;
Beside Thy Crad le, Here I Stand (4210) Bach&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Gle nn L. Klep inger, Cass Music Departme nt Head, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1938&#13;
&#13;
Easy .&#13;
&#13;
March for Americans (421 l)&#13;
Ferde Grefe, Composer, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Robbi ns&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Two Woodland Sketches (4212)&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Leonard Falcone, Michigan State College, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Three Sketches for Band (4213)&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Marks&#13;
Homer La Gassey, Instrume nta l Music Supervisor, De troit, Co nducting&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
San Francisco e l Grande (4216)&#13;
Lecuona&#13;
Marks&#13;
Graham T. Ove rgard, Wayne Unive rsity, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*Pas de Six from "William Tell" (4203)&#13;
Introduction and Samba (4204)&#13;
Don Sinta, Saxophone Soloist&#13;
&#13;
*Bugler's&#13;
&#13;
Holiday (4208)&#13;
&#13;
George Washington Bridge (4209)&#13;
&#13;
Grefe&#13;
&#13;
MacDowell-&#13;
&#13;
*Mid-West Glory (4214)&#13;
Edwards&#13;
Austyn R. Edwards, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Corteg e and Sche rzo (4215)&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Mo ussorgsky Omega&#13;
&#13;
Be rceuse and Fina le (4217)&#13;
&#13;
Stravinsky&#13;
&#13;
Marks&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
194 1&#13;
&#13;
Me d. Diff.&#13;
&#13;
Rakes of Mal low (4218)&#13;
&#13;
Ande rson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Wa lters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Respig hi&#13;
&#13;
Ricordi&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
*La Mascarada (4219)&#13;
Pines of the Appian Way (4220)&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 p ublications wh ich a re revie w e d o n Pages 22 throug h 31.&#13;
Page nine&#13;
&#13;
�NORTH CHICAGO GRADE SCHOOL BAND&#13;
North Chicago, Illinois&#13;
FRANK LAURIE, Director&#13;
&#13;
Frank Laurie&#13;
Since the introduction of instrumental music in the District No. 64 Grade Schools of North Chicago,&#13;
Illinois, nine years ago, the progress of this young band has been outstanding. Starting with a mere&#13;
handful of instrumentalists, the band program now boasts a yearly average of 180 members from&#13;
approximately 800 students in grades 4 through 8. Of the 180 children in the program, the groupings are&#13;
divided as follows: Concert Band, 85; Prep Band (Preparatory group) 65, and the balance in the category&#13;
of beginners.&#13;
Approximately 60% of the school district's enrollment is comprised of children of government employees (Navy, Veterans Administration, Etc.), and though these people are in the North Chicago School&#13;
District for limited periods of time, the Band program is not denied these youngsters. From year to&#13;
year, the Band Department must accept its membership loss through parent transfer along with 8th&#13;
grade graduations.&#13;
A normal year's activities for the North Chicagoans includes:&#13;
2 Public Concerts (Average attendance, 1,000)&#13;
6 Club or Group Concerts (P. T. A., Band Parents, Veterans' Hospital, etc.)&#13;
7 Parades (local and nearby communities)&#13;
District and State Solo-Ensemble Contests&#13;
District and State Band Contests&#13;
In order to meet with the band's many public appearances, Mr. Laurie conducts a part-time summer&#13;
program. This summer schedule consists of bi-weekly rehearsals for the Concert Band, sectionals for the&#13;
Prep Band, and group lessons for the Beginners.&#13;
More and better instruments are continually being added to the Band Department of North Chicago.&#13;
Nearly all of the school-owned instruments are in constant use by the Concert Band. At present the&#13;
department owns the following: 1 oboe, 1 bassoon, 2 bass clarinets, 2 baritone saxophones, 5 basses,&#13;
l string bass, 4 baritones, 5 French Horns, 3 mellophones, and a complete set of percussion.&#13;
Assi·sting in the physical preparations of the Band's many functions is the enthusiastic North Chicago&#13;
Band Association, comprised of parents of all the school instrumentalists. This organization has aided the&#13;
band considerably in the purchase of many necessary items. The $500.00 annual Band budget offered by&#13;
the Board of Education is usually augmented by $1,000.00 raised by the Parent group, and $1,000.00&#13;
raised by the band at its public concerts.&#13;
Mr. Laurie, who has been the band's director the past 8 years, handles the entire Band program of&#13;
the Grade Schools. All work is done in heterogeneous groups, with each beginner and Prep Band member&#13;
receiving a total of 1 hour per week of school time for instruction. The Prep Band holds 1 rehearsal per&#13;
week (after school), beginning 6 weeks prior to its two concerts with the Concert Band. The Concert&#13;
Band members are given one sectional lesson per week on school time (35 minutes), but rehear,se an&#13;
approximate total of 5 hours per week before and after school hours.&#13;
A very small percentage of the North Chicagoans have the advantage of private lessons. With the&#13;
exception of 5 or 6 children who study privately during a school year, all the instruction is done at&#13;
school under Mr. Laurie's direction.&#13;
With the splendid cooperation of the school administration, the staff, and the community itself, this&#13;
young band is helping to weld together a community spirit that is obvious to the 12,000 residents of&#13;
North Chicago.&#13;
Evidence of the musical progress in North Chicago is shown by the beginning of a string program.&#13;
This program, with a separate instructor, was begun this school year.&#13;
On September 7, 1954, the new North Chicago Community High School opened its doors to the&#13;
community. Both Band and Choral departments of the High School are already enthusiastically under way.&#13;
Within the Concert Band, Mr. Laurie is ably assisted each year by Officers elected by the children.&#13;
The officers (President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Librarian) handle all details connected with the operation&#13;
of a successful school band. Records are kept on each Concert Band member, and those with exceptionally&#13;
good records (30 to 40 youngsters) at the end of a school year, are invited to a Band-Parent sponsored&#13;
"Trip to the City" with all expenses paid . Keeping the band active, in a variety of activities, is a prime&#13;
factor in holding the interest of the "little music masters".&#13;
Arthur J. Katzenmaier, Superintendent of Schools, made the following comments at a meeting of&#13;
parents and teachers recently:&#13;
"The band program in the North Chicago school,s has been an outstanding public relations endeavor.&#13;
It has been an excellent example of good teaching, creating a harmonious feeling between school and&#13;
the community. It seems to me 'the know-how and spirit' of the band director has been the vital factor&#13;
in bringing about such a fine program. This is teaching at its best".&#13;
Page ten&#13;
&#13;
�THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
1:15-2:45 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
CLIN IC CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
NORTH CHICAGO, ILLINOI S, GRA DE SCHOO L BAN D&#13;
Frank La urie, Director&#13;
COMPOS ER&#13;
&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Cannan&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*Snow Mountain, Overture (4302)&#13;
&#13;
Akers&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Desert Star, Baritone Solo (4303)&#13;
Soloist, John Perry, Grade 8&#13;
&#13;
Dav is&#13;
&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Conroe, March (4301 )&#13;
&#13;
*Tenderly (4304)&#13;
&#13;
Gross&#13;
arr. Herfurth Morris&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*Main Street, U. S. A. (4305)&#13;
&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
&#13;
Morris&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Gem Grade School Band Folio No. 1&#13;
1. Safari (4306)&#13;
2. Old Spinning Wheel (4307)&#13;
&#13;
arr. Barnes&#13;
Marteau&#13;
Hill&#13;
&#13;
Shapiro&#13;
Bernstein&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Scepter of Liberty (4308)&#13;
Olivadoti&#13;
John Paynter, Northwestern University, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
1954&#13;
Easy&#13;
Dancing Reeds (4309)&#13;
Eisch&#13;
Leonard&#13;
Clarinet Trio Penny Walkanoff, Grade 8; Mariellen Baker, Grade 7; Dorothy Stack, Grade 7&#13;
L&#13;
egendary Air (4310)&#13;
&#13;
Erickson&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Ou r Instrumental Program at North Chicago Arthur J. Katzenmaier,&#13;
Superinte ndent of the North Chicago District No. 64 Schools&#13;
&#13;
*Aztec, Overture (4311)&#13;
La Rougette (4312)&#13;
Piano Soloist, Jeannette Benson&#13;
&#13;
Frank&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Manhattan Beach, March (4313)&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
1949&#13;
Joseph Adgate, Director of the North Chicago High School Band, Conducting&#13;
Cachuca (4314)&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Clarence Sawhill , University of California, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
* Mills "Pops" Concert Band Book&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
1. Come Back to Sorrento (4315) DeCurtis&#13;
Forrest Buchte l, Composer, Conducting&#13;
2. Orpheus In A Jam (with&#13;
apologies to Offenbach) (4316)&#13;
&#13;
Mill s&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*The Adventures of Pinocchio (4317)&#13;
Paul Yoder, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*L&#13;
ochinvar (4318)&#13;
&#13;
Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
Page eleven&#13;
&#13;
�THE INSTRUMENT AL MUSIC PROGRAM&#13;
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA PUBLIC SCHOOLS&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT HAZELMAN , Supervisor of Instrumental M usic&#13;
and Director of the Seni or High School Band&#13;
DA VI D M . A RN ER, A ssistant Director&#13;
GEORGE D. TO EN ES, A ssistan t Director&#13;
Herbert Ha zelman&#13;
&#13;
Greensboro is situated in Piedmont, North Ca rolina, a section blessed with natu ral resources, not the&#13;
least of which is the highest percentage of school age children in the United States. Couple this circumstance with a rate of growth which has seen the city t rip le its population since 1930 (30,000 to 90,000)&#13;
while remaining near the bottom in per capita income, and one can appreciate the Gargantuan effort&#13;
put forth by school officials and citizens in providing an enriched school program which is second to&#13;
none in the South and which will compare favorably with any in the country.&#13;
Greensboro pioneered in the development of North Caro lina's school band and orchestra movement&#13;
during the ear ly l 920's but saw most of its highly developed program swept away during the depression&#13;
years. In 1936, the present director of the Greensboro Senior High Schoo l Band began a rebuilding&#13;
program with 13 students , instrumen ts salvaged from pre-depression days, and a $300.00 budget. From&#13;
this humb le beginning has g rown a department which today includes 9 full -time and 5 part-time instrumental teache rs carrying on band and orchestra work in each of the city's 22 elementary, 6 junior high,&#13;
and 2 senior high schools.&#13;
Classroom teachers, under supervision, give pre-band and pre-orchestra instrument experience to all&#13;
primary grade pupils. In the g rammar grades, itinerant teachers meet bi-weekly classes in string and w ind&#13;
instruments. There are bands and orchestras in all junior and senior high schools and in many cases the&#13;
di recto rs also teach the instrument classes in their feeder schoo ls.&#13;
The annual budget varies with needs, but once alloted by the schoo l board , it is disbursed as the&#13;
instrumental supervisor directs . This po licy has enabled the Greensboro schools to provide comp lete basic&#13;
instrumentation for all junior and senior high schools and a central library containing practically all band&#13;
and orchestra music published since 1935 and a complete selection of standard works. Each student&#13;
provides his own instrument for beginning class work. Changes to school-owned instruments for the&#13;
purpose of instrumentation are made in junior high schoo l. An expert repairman in a completely equipped,&#13;
schoo l owned shop, keeps all schoo l-owned equipment in exce llent repair through a system of preventive maintenance.&#13;
&#13;
The Greensboro Senior High School instrumental department consists of a training band of 40 re latively inexperienced players, an activities band of 60 more advanced ones, and a concert band of l 00.&#13;
These groups and the 85 piece symphony orchestra each rehearse for five 50-minute periods a week&#13;
during the school day. The marching band, consisting of two identical 70 piece units , rehea rses after&#13;
school during footba ll season only.&#13;
&#13;
The flexible schedule in a school of 1600 students and a co-operative principal allow section rehearsals&#13;
du ring study pe riods. Two iunior high school directors, whose schedules are so arranged, act as&#13;
assistants to the director with these small groups. Since economic factors and lack of teachers make&#13;
the taking of private lessons almost non-existent in this part of the country, this is the only individual&#13;
attention pos sible for bandsmen.&#13;
&#13;
The marching band presents half-time shows at all home football games and travels to out-of-town&#13;
conference games. It also accepts invitations to perform at several col lege games each fall. The concert&#13;
band plays the best in band literature in its four formal concerts and two school assembly programs&#13;
each yea r. This group also participates in the state music contest-festival and has fulfilled many&#13;
engagements as a reading band in new music clinics. The activities band furnishes music for such school&#13;
functions as basketball games , May Day, and assemb lies. It also shares two of the formal evening concerts&#13;
with th e conce rt band.&#13;
&#13;
The success of the instrumental music deoartment of Greensboro' s schools is not measured in enrollment&#13;
system , or organization, but in terms of teaching the performance of and appreciation for the&#13;
highest art&#13;
music. A deg ree of this success can best be noted by this fact. The administration, school&#13;
board, fellow students, and citizens of the community supplied the $7,500.00 necessary to bring this&#13;
band to the Mid-West Nationa l Band Clinic through paid admissions&#13;
to 3 band concerts!!&#13;
Page twelve&#13;
&#13;
�THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
Herbert Hazelman, Director&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Choral from 32 Moravian Chorals (4401) arr. Neuman Brodt&#13;
*Theme and Variations from String&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quartet Opus 18 No. 5 (4402)&#13;
Reed&#13;
Mills&#13;
Jenkins&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Concert March, Pieces of Eight (4403)&#13;
Neff&#13;
Ditson&#13;
Frederick Fennell, Eastman School of Music, Conducting&#13;
Polacca from Second Concerto for&#13;
Weber&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Clarinet (4404)&#13;
Brown&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
Soloist, George Toenes&#13;
Bizet&#13;
*Trompette et Tambour (4405)&#13;
Barnes&#13;
Bourne&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin, Conducting&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Gillis&#13;
Bainum&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*Spiritual from Symphony 5 1/2 (4406)&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
Glen Cliffe Bainum, Conducting&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*The Man ·Who Invented Music (4407)&#13;
Gillis&#13;
Mills&#13;
David Arner, Narrator&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*The Typewriter (4408)&#13;
Werle&#13;
Mi lls&#13;
Traugott Rohner, Conducting&#13;
The Invincible Eagle (4409)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Presser&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Clarence Sawhill, University of California, Conducting&#13;
Wagner&#13;
Siegfried's Rhine Journey (441 0)&#13;
Cailliet&#13;
Remick&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Das Pensionat (4411)&#13;
Von Suppe Ludwig&#13;
Quarto&#13;
"Adjudication School" Harold Bachma n, Clarence Sawh il l, William D. Reve lli&#13;
Michiaan March (4412)&#13;
Goldman&#13;
Chappell&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
William D. Revelli, Un iversity of Michigan, Conducting&#13;
*Gypsy Gayety (4413)&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Mills&#13;
Quarto&#13;
David Bennett, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Napoli (4414)&#13;
Bellstedt&#13;
Simon&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Trumpet Solo, Don Jacoby, Staff Trumpeter with A. B. C., Chicago&#13;
*Caribeana (4415)&#13;
Poole&#13;
Bel win&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Harold Bachman, University of Florida, Conducting&#13;
Offenbach&#13;
Ballet Parisien (4416)&#13;
Isaac&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Merle Isaac, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Pride of the Mid-West (4417)&#13;
Edwards&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Austyn R. Edwards, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Country Dance (4418)&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Fred&#13;
Belwin&#13;
Herbert Fred, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
*Trauer Marsch (4419)&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Leidzen&#13;
Associated&#13;
H. E. Nutt, VanderCook College, Conduct ing&#13;
Georgia Buck (4420)&#13;
Stringfield&#13;
Brodt&#13;
Octavo&#13;
McHugh&#13;
*A Melodic Caravan (4421)&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Yoder&#13;
Big 3&#13;
Paul Yoder, Composer, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1934&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 th roug h 31.&#13;
Adjudication Sheets used this evening are compliments of the National Interscholastic Music Activities&#13;
Commission (an Auxiliary of the MENC) 64 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago. All types of Adjudication Sheets&#13;
(Solo, Ensemble, and Organization for both Instrumental and Vocal) are available at a nominal price.&#13;
Write them for complete details.&#13;
Page thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC PROGRAM&#13;
DA V EN PORT PUBLIC SCHOOLS&#13;
&#13;
Davenport, Iowa&#13;
F. E. MORTIBOY, Supervisor of Instrumental Music&#13;
ERNEST BEERENDS, Assistant Director&#13;
&#13;
F. E. Mortiboy&#13;
&#13;
The instrumental music program in the Davenport Public Schools begins w ith string classes in the&#13;
fourth grade. This is the only class instruction in the program and is continued for one year only. The&#13;
balance of instruction is given in short private lessons. Woodwind, brass and percussion students start&#13;
with lessons in the fifth grade. String pupils receive one fifteen minute lesson each week and others&#13;
receive one ten minute lesson per week. This program is carried on from the fifth grade through high&#13;
school. Elementary school bands and orchestras are maintained on an area basis, meeting once each week&#13;
after school. In junior high schools, bands and orchestras meet twice each week for fifty minute periods&#13;
in the regular school schedule. The lesson period is taken out of other class time. In high school, band&#13;
meets five periods per week; orchestra also five periods, with the w ind complement meeting f or two&#13;
of those.&#13;
The school population is about 11,000, of w hich 6,500 are enrolled in the elementary (l through 6);&#13;
2,400 in three junior high schools (7-8-9); and 2,100 in senior high school (10-11-12). Enrol lment in instrumental&#13;
music will run about 300 in elementary, 250 in junior high and 175 in senior high. The&#13;
present band membership is 115. During football season this is one band, and during concert season the&#13;
group is broken into two sections three of the five days each week. As both sections meet at the same&#13;
hour, the assignment to section is very fluid and normally will run about 85 in first and 30 in second&#13;
section.&#13;
There are six instrumental teachers. In two of the junior highs, one man has both band and orchestra&#13;
with the help of a woodwind teacher one day each. He also teaches in his "feeder" elementary schools.&#13;
In one junior high there are two men, one doing band work and one orchestra, each w ith the usual&#13;
" feeder" elementary buildings. At present there are twelve 'elementary schools. The Supervisor of Instrumental&#13;
Music and Director of the High School Band spends most of his time at high school and has&#13;
the assistance of a string man one and one-half days and a woodwind man two and one-half days.&#13;
There is an extensive program of solo and ensemble participation in the state contest. Large groups&#13;
do not enter in the state contests, but do participate in a non-competitive two-day festival w ith two&#13;
other schools. Most of the large group competition in the last few years has been in the Chicagoland&#13;
Music Festival. winning first four times, and in the Riverview Park Mardi Gras, in which first place was&#13;
also won.&#13;
A six weeks' summer program for all elementary and junior high students includes band on two&#13;
levels, string ensemble on two levels, and beginning classes for all instruments. The high school band&#13;
has a four weeks' program which includes three park concerts, and usually winds up with a trip to&#13;
Chicago, eithe r for the Chicagoland Festival or the Riverview Park Mardi Gras. This trip, plus the two day&#13;
festival with Burlington and Ottumwa, make up the trips for the year for the entire group.&#13;
The budget th is year for new and replacement instruments is $3,500. The budget for music and repairs&#13;
is $1,340. Uniform replacement, contest and festival trips, etc. are financed from the proceeds of season&#13;
ticket sales and the annual variety minstrel show. These two activities will net about $4,250. for the&#13;
vocal and instrumental departments. Students pay fo r their own meals on all trips.&#13;
A very active Parents' Club takes over much of the responsibility for the annual variety show and&#13;
contributes much to the success of other projects. The school admin istration has been most co-operative&#13;
in all ways. A fine physical plant and money for equipment are provided. The Principals are most helpful in scheduling students for band and orchestra and for lessons. Just this year, a remodeling p roject at&#13;
the high school provided twelve sound t reated practice rooms. A new junior high school, presently under&#13;
construction, will contain one of the most up-to-date music wings. Due to the combined cooperation&#13;
of school administration, faculty, directors, parents, and students, the Davenport instrumental music&#13;
program ranks with the finest in the nation.&#13;
Page fourteen&#13;
&#13;
�FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 17, 1954&#13;
1:30-3: 15 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
DAVENPORT, IOWA, HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
&#13;
F. E. Mortiboy, Director&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
*The Nutmeggers (450 1)&#13;
&#13;
Osterling&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
O ctavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
* Bathshe ba (4502)&#13;
&#13;
Singe r&#13;
&#13;
Fox&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
Shostakovitch&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
Diffi cult&#13;
&#13;
Tscha ikowsky&#13;
&#13;
Southern&#13;
(Texas)&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
Royal Fireworks Music (4505)&#13;
&#13;
Hande l&#13;
&#13;
Music Press&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Solo de Concours (4506)&#13;
Marcia Mo rtiboy, Clarine t Soloist&#13;
&#13;
Ra baud&#13;
&#13;
Andra ud&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
191 3&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
The Girl I Left Be h ind Me (4507)&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Med ium&#13;
&#13;
Carnival of Venice (4508)&#13;
Sigurd Rasche r, Saxophone Soloist&#13;
&#13;
arr. Rascher&#13;
&#13;
Chappe ll&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1936&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Belwin&#13;
&#13;
Q ua rto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Me dium&#13;
&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Espana Cani (45 11 )&#13;
Marquina&#13;
Ma rks&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
1954&#13;
Ernest Bee re nds, Assistant Director, Dave nport High School Band, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Fina le Symphony No. 5 (4503)&#13;
*Canzonetta, Multiple Flute Solo (4504)&#13;
&#13;
Sea Chantey (4509)&#13;
Fre d&#13;
Frede rick Ebbs, University of Iowa, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
On The Ma ll (45 1O&#13;
)&#13;
Gold man&#13;
Fische r&#13;
Qu ickste p&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Go ldman Band , New Yo rk City, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med . Diff.&#13;
&#13;
Ha nsen&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Barnho use&#13;
&#13;
Q uickste p&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Emblem of Honor (4512)&#13;
Danb urg&#13;
Re mick&#13;
Harold Bachma n, Unive rsity of Florida, Conducting&#13;
Chora le Pre lude in E Mino r (4513)&#13;
&#13;
Reed&#13;
&#13;
*Sky Jockey (45 14)&#13;
Edwa rds&#13;
Austyn R. Edwa rds, Compose r, Conducting&#13;
The Girl In Satin (45 15)&#13;
&#13;
Ande rson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Q ua rto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Me d . Easy&#13;
&#13;
The Baton Twirl e r (4516)&#13;
Forrest McAll iste r, Con ducting&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bandland&#13;
&#13;
Qu ickste p&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Pre lude and Fug ue in D Minor (4517)&#13;
&#13;
Bach&#13;
&#13;
FitzSimons&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Med . Easy&#13;
&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Fisch e r&#13;
&#13;
Qu ickstep&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Me d . Easy&#13;
&#13;
Palestrina&#13;
&#13;
Elkan Vogel&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Manhattan Beach (45 18)&#13;
Pa ul Yode r, Composer, Cond ucting&#13;
Sanctus (45 19)&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Numbers ma rked (*) are 1954 p ub lications w hich are revie w e d on Pages 22 th roug h 3 1.&#13;
&#13;
Eve ry numb e r of a ll e ig ht bands w il l be re corde d by the "On The Spot Recording Co." Dire cto rs&#13;
inte reste d in b uying any of these record ing s may leave t he ir o rde rs at the " On The Spot Record ing Co."&#13;
booth in the Displ ay Are a outsid e the G ra nd Bal lroom. Recordings w il l be ma ile d abo ut January 15.&#13;
Page fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�THE VANDERCOOK COLLEGE BAN D&#13;
RICHARD BRI TTA IN , Director&#13;
&#13;
Richard Brittain&#13;
&#13;
The VanderCook College Band was first organized under the personal direction of Mr. H. A. VanderCook&#13;
fo r the purpose of studying interpretation of school band ma terials, demonstrating rehearsal&#13;
techniques, reading manuscript compositions of students and faculty, and improving performing ability&#13;
and musicianship of students. Because VanderCook College is a teacher training institution , the teaching&#13;
angle has a lways been stressed in ensemble work.&#13;
On June l, 1954, after forty-five years on Chicago's west side, VanderCook Co llege of Music moved&#13;
to a new tempora ry loca tion at 32 19 South Michigan Avenue, ad jacent to the 110 acre campus being&#13;
developed by Illinois Institute of Techno logy. Academic and educational courses are taken at Illinois&#13;
Tech. and out of town VanderCook students are housed in the Illinois Tech dormitories and apartments,&#13;
enjoying the eating, shopping and recreation faci lities of their new Commons Building.&#13;
Facu lty, graduates, students, former students and friends of VanderCook are now busy in a campaign&#13;
to raise $300,000 for a new two-story fire-proof bui lding spec ial ly designed to meet the needs of the&#13;
various subjects and activities of VanderCook Co llege. With the faci lit ies provided by this new building&#13;
the resea rch and practical training program of VanderCook College will move forward with renewed&#13;
v igo r.&#13;
&#13;
1954 SUMMER SESS ION BAND&#13;
&#13;
VanderCook Co llege of Music Announces Its 1955 Summer Session June 20 to July 29, 1955.&#13;
Practical and interesting courses leading to Bachelor or Master of Mus ic Education Degrees For Band,&#13;
Orchestra and Choral Directors Outstanding Faculty Tuition $ 12 per Semester Hour. Approved for&#13;
Veteran Training under the G. I. Bi ll of Rights. Special Work in Marching Band and Band Pageantry. High&#13;
School Student Summer Program with Scholarship Rates Offered H. S. Students and 1955 Graduates .&#13;
Rooms will be reserved for everyone requesting them in the new modern dormitories and apartment&#13;
bui ldings of the Illinois Institu te of Technology, adjoining VanderCook Co llege. Enrollments are now&#13;
being accepted for the Spring Semester, which begins February 7 , 1955; the Summer Session June 20&#13;
J uly 29, 1955; and the Fall Session , w h ich begins September 12, 1955. Fo r complete courses of study and&#13;
desc ription of subjects, tuition fees, housing and other expenses, write to The Registrar. Please indicate&#13;
courses you are interested in: Bachelor of Music Education, Master of Music Education, Special High&#13;
Schoo l Courses.&#13;
VANDERCOOK COLLEGE OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
Page sixteen&#13;
&#13;
3219 South M ich igan Avenue&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO 16, ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
�FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 17, 1954&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
VANDERCOOK COLLEGE OF MUSIC BAND, CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
Richard E. Brittain, Conductor&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
SIZE&#13;
YR. PUB. GRADE&#13;
TITLE&#13;
. March Opus No. 99 (4601)&#13;
Prokofieff&#13;
Leeds&#13;
Quarto&#13;
1946&#13;
Medium&#13;
1937&#13;
Maid of Asturia Overture (4602)&#13;
Secchi&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Difficult&#13;
1948&#13;
Concerto for Trumpet (4603)&#13;
Haydn&#13;
Chappell&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
a. Andante&#13;
b. Allegro&#13;
Larry Buchte l, Soloist&#13;
Forrest L. Buchtel, Conducting&#13;
1942&#13;
Weinberger Mercury&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Difficu lt&#13;
Czech Rhapsody (4604)&#13;
Medium&#13;
1941&#13;
La Rouge tte (4605)&#13;
Be nne tt&#13;
Mi lls&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Harp Soloist Miss Lorraine King, Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra&#13;
David Bennett, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Harp furnished th rough the courtesy of Lyon &amp; Healy, Ch icago&#13;
1954&#13;
*Hi-Fa lutin' Hoedown (4606)&#13;
Simeone&#13;
Shawnee&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
1954&#13;
*Pageant for Band (4607)&#13;
Persiche tti&#13;
Fische r&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldma·n , Goldman Band, New York City, Conducting&#13;
1954&#13;
*Haskel l's Rascals (4608)&#13;
Yoder&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
Pe rcussio n Soloists Haske ll Harr, W illiam Ludwig, Jr., Robert Buggert&#13;
Pau l Yoder, Compose r, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Show of Band Uniforms. Planned and directed by George Myers, Portage Township&#13;
Senior High School, Gary India na. Model s are members of Mr. Myers' Band.&#13;
Uniform Companies participating :&#13;
Fruha uf Southwest Uniform Co. , Wichita, Kan.&#13;
The Craddock Uniforms, Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
De Moulin Bros. &amp; Co., Greenville, Ill.&#13;
Stanbury &amp; Company, Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
8:45 P.M.&#13;
Style&#13;
&#13;
Festal Day March (4609)&#13;
*Brazil iana ire (461 OJ&#13;
&#13;
Ba rnhouse&#13;
Fox&#13;
Southern&#13;
*Texa s Tempo March (4611)&#13;
(Texas)&#13;
Moore&#13;
Donald I. Moore, Compose r, Baylor University, Conducting&#13;
*Lumberjack Overture (4612)&#13;
Reed&#13;
Ha nsen&#13;
Harold Bachman, Un ive rsity of Florida , Conducting&#13;
Davis&#13;
*Scotch Folk Song Suite (4613)&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
Albert Davis, Compose r, Phoenix, Arizona, Conducting&#13;
L Chica Cuban a (46 14)&#13;
a&#13;
Nyquist&#13;
Be lwin&#13;
H. E. Nutt, Dean of Va nde rCook College, Conducting&#13;
*Blues in the Band (4615)&#13;
Baroni&#13;
Fischer&#13;
De lfo Baroni, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*March King, J . P. Sousa (4616)&#13;
Smith&#13;
Associated&#13;
L&#13;
eonard Smith, Composer, Conducting&#13;
* Icarus, Tone Poe m (4617)&#13;
J ohnson&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Al Wrig ht, Purdue Un iversity, Conducting&#13;
*Curtain At Eight (4618)&#13;
Walters&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Harold L. Walters, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*Pre lude &amp; Fugue in F Minor (4619)&#13;
FitzSimons&#13;
Bach&#13;
Gle n Cliffe Bainum, Conducting&#13;
*Caribbe an Ca rnival (4620)&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Richard Worth ington, Associate Conductor, Vande rCook Co ll ege,&#13;
*Trium p ha l Ma rch (4621)&#13;
Rozsa&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Th o mas Fabish , Conducting&#13;
*Pleasant Valley Overture (4622)&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
*Ro mpin' Stomp (4623)&#13;
Mi lls&#13;
Gil lis&#13;
*Ve lvet Glove (4624)&#13;
Spina&#13;
Mo rris&#13;
*Ceremonia l March (4625)&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
Remick&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1934&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med ium&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Q uickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Mediu m&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Q uickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
Conducting&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
19 54&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
19 54&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Qua rto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
1954&#13;
1954&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Easy&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Nu mbe rs marked (*) are 1954 pub lications which a re reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
Page seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�THE KIEL MUNICIPAL BAND&#13;
Kiel, Wisconsin&#13;
EDGAR P. THIESSEN, Director&#13;
&#13;
Edgar P. Thiessen&#13;
&#13;
The unique position this organization has attained in the music world is aptly expressed in this&#13;
passage from Clyde Hostetter's feature story, NOW YOUR TOWN CAN HAVE A BAND, in the June, 1953,&#13;
issue of "Pathfinder". "Kiel's 40-piece band is one of the best in the country&#13;
it's been called the&#13;
'ideal small town band'&#13;
yet the town numbers only 2, 129."&#13;
Kiel's interest in music goes back to 1886 when its first band, the Kappelle Des Kiel Musik Verein, was&#13;
organized. In 1895 it became known as the Kiel Arion Band and Orchestra, and in 1921 the Junior Arion&#13;
Band was created to further exploit the interest in music already instilled in Kiel's youth. In 1928 emerged&#13;
the Kiel Municipal Band as we know it today. Individual lessons were given until 1930, after which&#13;
the then new and rapidly developing high school music program resulted in the addition of a growing&#13;
number of members. World War II also played an important role in the band's history. The demands&#13;
of the Armed Forces depleted its ranks to such an extent that women were admitted for the first time .&#13;
Today they represent an important segment of the personnel. The fact that the present membership includes&#13;
a mother as well as three father-daughter duos bears this out.&#13;
The band has been unusually fortunate in having had only two conductors in its twenty-six year&#13;
history. J. G. Zwickey was appointed in 1928 and held the position for six years. Kiel's own Edgar&#13;
Thiessen, a product of the Junior Band, assumed the directorship at the age of 20 and at the time&#13;
was believed to be the youngest bandmaster in the state of Wisconsin as reported by "Economist&#13;
Magazine." Today four "graduates" of the Municipal Band head music departments in state high&#13;
schools.&#13;
The source of the band's personnel is not only the local high school, but also music loverls of surrounding&#13;
communities, some members driving as far as 15 miles to attend the twice-a-week rehearsals&#13;
the year around. These enthusiastic musicians are rewarded with a small annual bonus based on their&#13;
attendance. Faithful members receive further recognition in the form of 5-10-15-20 and 25 year service&#13;
awards which are presented at an annual Christmas party. Those with the best attendance are rewarded&#13;
in a special way with prizes donated by local merchants. This party and other band functions are made&#13;
possible through the co-operation of parents, husbands and wives who serve on various committees.&#13;
Such all-around community support is essential in maintaining a successful voluntary organization .&#13;
Originally the band was financed with monthly dues paid by members and local business men. Card&#13;
parties, movies, barn dances, etc. were staged to raise additional funds. These sources soon proved inadequate&#13;
and, as a result, the City Council voted an annual appropriation of $850, but as the membership&#13;
grew and the financial needs increased, it was necessary to supplement this appropriation. Since&#13;
1933 the Band and local Fire Department have sponsored a mammoth annual picnic, the proceeds of&#13;
which are shared, each organization receiving between $2,000 and $2,500.&#13;
With this well-established financial program the band now owns several of the larger and more&#13;
costly instruments as well as all uniforms, and a music library valued at $5,000. Members desiring to&#13;
purchase their own instruments are aided with financial loans.&#13;
The band's administration consists of a Board of Directors, including three business and professional&#13;
people, two band members, and its Musical Director&#13;
Exchange concerts with neighboring communities, free local indoor and outdoor concerts, some&#13;
featuring guest soloists and conductors, constitute the basic program for the year. Continued interest&#13;
is maintained with an annual trip sponsored by the band and sometimes combined with a music festival.&#13;
In recent years the band has participated in such competitive events as the Cedarburg (Wisconsin) Music&#13;
Festival, the South Milwaukee Spectacle of Music, the Waterloo (Canada) Band Festival, and the Chicagoland&#13;
Music Festival, the latter by virtue of a first place award at South Milwaukee.&#13;
The success story of the Kiel Municipal Band is typically American, combined community effort to&#13;
provide opportunities in the field of music to its citizens of all walks of life.&#13;
Page eighteen&#13;
&#13;
�SATURDAY FORENOON, DECEMBER 18, 1954&#13;
9:00-10:45 A.M.&#13;
&#13;
CLINIC CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
KIEL, WISCONSIN, MUNICIPAL BAND&#13;
Edgar P. Thiessen, Director&#13;
&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Spirit of Freedom (4701)&#13;
&#13;
Cooper&#13;
&#13;
Fox&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Light Cavalry (4702)&#13;
&#13;
von Suppe&#13;
&#13;
Fillmore&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1922&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Clarinet Cake (4703)&#13;
&#13;
Hermann&#13;
&#13;
E. M. S.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Bergeim&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Carter&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Harmonica Player of New Orleans (4706) Miller&#13;
&#13;
Elkan&#13;
Vogel&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Old Vienna (4704)&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Bergeim, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*Overture in Classical Style (4705)&#13;
&#13;
Thendara (4707)&#13;
&#13;
Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Wisconsin Forward Forever (4708)&#13;
&#13;
Sousa&#13;
&#13;
Harms&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, Un iversity of Wisconsin, Conducting&#13;
arr. Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Williamson&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Short Piece for Band (471 O)&#13;
&#13;
Helbig&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Campus Festival (4711)&#13;
&#13;
Savino&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Fox&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Paulson&#13;
&#13;
Pro Art&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Highlights from Oklahoma (4709)&#13;
&#13;
Golden Rule (4712)&#13;
Goldman&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Conducting&#13;
*La Fiesta (4713)&#13;
Baritone Vocal Solos (4714)&#13;
a.&#13;
&#13;
Eri Tu from the Masked Ball&#13;
&#13;
Verdi&#13;
&#13;
B. M. I.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
b.&#13;
&#13;
One Alone from Desert Song&#13;
&#13;
Romberq&#13;
&#13;
Harms&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
My Faith looks Up To Thee&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
1951&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
*High Barbary (4715)&#13;
&#13;
Jackson&#13;
&#13;
Bou rne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Kentucky Trotter (4716)&#13;
&#13;
Perkins&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
G reen Acres (4717)&#13;
&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
&#13;
W itmark&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
New Colonial (4718) ·&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
Church&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1901&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
National Spirit (4719)&#13;
&#13;
Humel&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Earl Thiel, Baritone Soloist&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are rev iewed on Pages 22 throug h 31.&#13;
Page nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�THE R. C. A. F. TRAINING COMMAND BAND&#13;
FLYING OFFICER CLIFFORD HUNT, C. D., Bandmaster&#13;
&#13;
Flying Officer&#13;
Clifford Hunt&#13;
&#13;
When it comes to sweet music the Royal Canadian Air Force Training Command Band ranks among the&#13;
highest of the nation's interpreters of either the full orchestral score, martial music or the syncopated&#13;
beat.&#13;
By ordinary standards the history of the R. C. A. F. Training Command Band is not a long one. It&#13;
dates back to the days of the Second World War when , in 1940, Flying Officer Clifford Hunt, C. D.,&#13;
of Hamilton, Ontario, the present bandmaster, was g iven the task of gathering together and directing&#13;
a group of musicians at R. C. A. F. Station Camp Bordeon, one of the R. C. A. F.'s ma jor flying units at&#13;
that time. After four years of playing in Canada at numerous functions in connection with the war&#13;
effort, the band proceeded overseas in 1944 where it became known as the No. 6 Bomber Group Band.&#13;
Today's Training Command Band still has a number of the original No. 6 Bomber Group Bandsmen&#13;
on its rolls and those together w ith others from an equally famous wartime band, the R. C. A. F. Overseas&#13;
Headquarters Band, formed the nucleus of the present band when it was organized in 1946.&#13;
A musicians band by any standard of comparison the Training Command Band has within its ranks&#13;
no less than twenty members who have played in military or other brass bands for most of their professional careers to four of these at least, those careers started at the early age of eight and have&#13;
continued uninterrupted ever since. Twelve of the members have studied at either, or t hrough affilliation&#13;
with, the Royal Ontario Conservatory of Music at Toronto, Ontario, one of the nation's foremost musical&#13;
colleges.&#13;
More than ten members of the Training Command Band have been associated with outstanding&#13;
Canadian symphony or philharmon ic orchestras. Many have played with well-known dance and entertainment organizations and list among their associations such well-known personages in the Canadian&#13;
field of Music as Mark Kenny, Bert Niosi, Paul Firman, Morgan Thomas, to mention but a few. Three&#13;
members of the band are composer-arrangers, one a vocal soloist, and one a choir-master and organist.&#13;
Over thirty-five of the forty-s ix members making up the fu ll band play more than one instrument and&#13;
at least eight members play anywhere from four to seven d ifferent instruments.&#13;
Training Command Band has played numerous engagements throughout Canada and with the exception of very few weeks of the year is on continuous tour performing at various R. C. A. F. Stations&#13;
and isolated units, or fulfilling other military assignments. The band is well-known to Canadians everywhere, having played at The Canadian National Exhibition as well as at numerous fa irs, civic functions&#13;
and celebrations.&#13;
Last year the band travelled by aircraft to the United Kingdom and the Continent, where it entertained American, British, French, Belgian and Netherlands personnel as well as Canadians. This tour&#13;
commenced on September 14th and the band engagements began at Fontaine belau, France on the 16th&#13;
of Septembe r. From that date onward until October 21st t he band satisfactorily completed twenty-four&#13;
engagements many of which entailed two or more concerts. These concerts covered everything from&#13;
hospital performances to outdoor concerts at such historic places as the Palace de Esplanade&#13;
Park, Metz,&#13;
France, the park of the Kaurhuis Speilbank in Baden-Baden, Germany, the town hall at Zweibruicken,&#13;
Germany, the beautiful park of Nottingham Castle in England and the famous Victoria Embankment Park&#13;
in London. During their stay in England the band had two recording sessions with the British Broadcasting Corporation . Throughout the whole tour it received the highest praise, both from those in the&#13;
musical world, as well as from service and civilian audiences. This summer the band played as the&#13;
guest band at Canada's outstanding musical f estival held at Kitchener-Waterloo.&#13;
In Canada the Training Command Band travels in its own specially designed bus and whether the&#13;
assignment is one calling for an informal concert at an Air Force unit or a gala performance in some&#13;
metropolitan center the announcement of the appearance of this band evokes wide-spread interest and&#13;
delight. Wherever the Training Command Band performs one could well paraphrase the words of&#13;
Tennyson and say "there is sweet music here"; indeed.&#13;
Page twenty&#13;
&#13;
�SATURDAY FORENOON, DECEMBER 18, 1954&#13;
11:00 A.M.&#13;
-12:45&#13;
&#13;
P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
THE BAND OF THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE TRAINING COMMAND&#13;
&#13;
Flying Officer, C. O. Hunt, Bandmaster&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
Introduction "Some Call It Canada" (4801) Pomeroy&#13;
March "On Parade" (4802)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Overture "Forza del Destine" (4803) ·&#13;
Verdi&#13;
Moderne "Prima Donna" (4804)&#13;
Gould&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
1921&#13;
1946&#13;
1939&#13;
&#13;
Concerto for B-flat Cornet and&#13;
1942&#13;
Military Band (4805)&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Wright&#13;
Chappell&#13;
1. Allegro;&#13;
2. Canzonetta;&#13;
3. Rondo&#13;
Soloist Musician Kenneth Moore&#13;
Paraphrase on Musetta's Waltz from&#13;
Puccini&#13;
1953&#13;
La Boheme (4806)&#13;
Harding&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Quarto&#13;
W. Allen Fisher, Barrie Collegiate Institute, Barrie, Ontario, Canada, Conducting&#13;
1934&#13;
Suite from "The Nutcracker" (4807)&#13;
Tschaikowsky Fischer&#13;
Quarto&#13;
5. Dance Russe Trepak&#13;
1. Overture Miniature&#13;
2. Marche&#13;
6. Dance Chinoise&#13;
7. Dance des Mirlitons&#13;
3. Dance Arabe&#13;
8. Valse des Fleurs&#13;
4. Dance de la Fee-Dragee&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
March "Illinois" (4808)&#13;
Goldman&#13;
. Hawkes&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Goldman Band, New York City, Conducting&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Fantasy "The Three Bears" (4809)&#13;
Coates&#13;
Chappell&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
March "L'lnfatigable" (4810)&#13;
de Celles&#13;
Maurice de Celles, Composer, Quebec, Canada, Conducting&#13;
*Suite "West Point Suite" (4811)&#13;
Milhaud&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Associated&#13;
1. Introduction;&#13;
2 . Recitative;&#13;
3. Fanfare&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*Selection "Allerseelen" (4812)&#13;
Strauss&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
Tenor Solos (4813)&#13;
1. E lucevan la Stella from La Tosca, Puccinin&#13;
2. Flower Song from Carmen&#13;
Bizet&#13;
3. Homing&#13;
del Riego-Ford&#13;
Soloist, Musician Tom Magee&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
March "Nulli Secundus" (4814)&#13;
O'Neill&#13;
Waterloo&#13;
Dr. Charles O'Neill, Conducting&#13;
Skinner&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Finale "Tap Roots" (4815)&#13;
Skinner&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1938&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1931&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
The R. C. A. F. March Past&#13;
THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER&#13;
THE QUEEN&#13;
The Band of The Royal Canadian Air Force appears through the kind permission of Air Vice-Marshal&#13;
J. G. Kerr, C. B. E., A. F. C., C. D., Air Officer Commanding, Training Command, Roy al Canadian Air&#13;
Force.&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
1 :00 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
GrandFinale Luncheon in Bal Tabarin Room Sixth Floor. Complimentary to Directors who&#13;
have attended the entire Convention, courtesy of the following Un iform Companies:&#13;
The Craddock Uniforms, 1211 Grand Avenue, Kansas City 6, Missouri&#13;
De Moulin Bros. &amp; Co., 1070 South Fourth Street, Greenville, Illinois&#13;
Fruhauf Southwest Uniform Co., 312 E. English St., Wichita, Kansas&#13;
Stanbury &amp; Co., 210 West Eighth Street, Kansas City 6, Missouri&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Speaker Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Conductor of The Goldman Band, New York City&#13;
Page twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Each of the 1954 band publications listed on pages 22-31 has been reviewed by the publisher&#13;
especially for the 1954 Mid-West Handbook. Facts contai ned in the review are listed in the following&#13;
order: Title Composer&#13;
Publisher Size Type of Number&#13;
Grade of Difficulty Review&#13;
Abe Lincoln (Gettysburg, 1863) Gillis&#13;
Mills Quarto Narrator and Band&#13;
Medium Difficult. Lincoln's&#13;
famous address composed for concert band and narrator by the well-known American composer. An&#13;
ideal composition, effectively scored, for your specia l or g e nera l program .&#13;
Alaskan Night&#13;
Frangkiser Belwin&#13;
the long Alaskan nights.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy. An impressionistic composition portraying&#13;
&#13;
Allerseelen (All Souls Day) Strauss&#13;
Davis Ludwig TonePoem Quarto&#13;
Medium.&#13;
Serious music of this&#13;
favorite, great Strauss' Art song, in the form of a free setting for Band. A tone poem, of great&#13;
beauty, it demands tone control for the long tones and is Wagnerish in style. It wil l add another&#13;
Strauss work of worthwhile music to the Band repe rtoi re.&#13;
All-Star Entrances and Fanfares&#13;
Bainum Yoder Kjos&#13;
Quick-Step BandBook Medium Easy. A new idea&#13;
in football band books comprising seven novel field entrances complete with individual charts and&#13;
synchronized music in every player's part.&#13;
American Cadet Castle&#13;
Pro Art Quickstep March&#13;
Easy.This snappy number will be another gem for&#13;
your marching band repertoire.&#13;
American Farmer&#13;
Beeler Hansen&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy. Walter Beeler whips "Farmer In The Dell",&#13;
"Old MacDonald Had A Farm", "The Old Oaken Bucket", "The Little Brown Ch urch", "Billy Boy"&#13;
and "Goodnight Ladies" into a colorful school band overture. An early grade band favorite.&#13;
American Minstrel&#13;
Foster Herfurth Hansen Quarto Overture Easy. A tribute to Stephen Foster,&#13;
weaving this minstrel's best tunes into an e asy, colorfu l fantasy arrangement by C. Paul Herfurth.&#13;
American Railroader Gass Hansen Quarto&#13;
Overture Easy. A descriptive, easy prese ntation of early&#13;
American railroading songs, including "My Lulu", "My Dads's The Engineer", and "She'll Be Comin'&#13;
Round The Mountain".&#13;
April Interlude Johnson Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy.A better than average overture for&#13;
this degree of difficulty. Contains interesting rhythms and mood changes. Approximate playing&#13;
time, 5 minutes&#13;
Asleep In The Deep&#13;
Petrie Walters Rubank Octavo Solo With Band&#13;
Easy. Solo for E-flat or BB-flat&#13;
Bass, Baritone or Baritone Saxophone. Band parts are w ithin the range of players who have studied&#13;
1 1/2years, solo part for students with about 2 years experience. Melody is paraphrased in three&#13;
separate styles and contains no complicated patterns; effective use of pyramid scoring. Suitable&#13;
for solo by entire section with band accompaniment.&#13;
Azalea Trail&#13;
Bennett Fischer Quarto Overture Easy. Outstanding descriptive overture with interesting&#13;
harmony and rhythm throughout. Highly recommended for contest, festival , or concert. Widely used&#13;
in sight reading contests last spring. Playing time approximately 4 1/2 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Frank Rubank Octavo Overture Easy. An easy overture for program or festival performance&#13;
Aztec&#13;
suitable for students with 1 to 2 years experience. The melodies are Indian in character with interesting parts scored for all sections of the band. No complicated rhythmic patterns.&#13;
Ballade In D-Minor&#13;
Brahms Walters Rubank Quarto Program Medium Easy.&#13;
A medium easy&#13;
band arrangement of the Brahms Opus 10, No. 1 fo r p iano. Excellent for program work or for&#13;
developing better intonation and balance, not only for the entire band, but also between the various&#13;
choirs with in the band.&#13;
Ballet Music from "William Tell" (Pas de Six) Rossini Hanson Ludwig&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Program Medium. A&#13;
Brilliant Transcription of this favorite. It is the Wed d ing Dance of the three couples and winds up&#13;
in wild abandon, making it an attractive program number for Class A and B bands. Has contest-festival&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
Band Combos No. 4- Beeler Gass&#13;
Hansen Quickstep Band Collection Easy to Medium. Polkas and&#13;
waltzes, originals and arrangements, for every indoo r and outdoor occasion. Pep assemblies, basketball&#13;
baseball, etc., in the effective band combo scoring.&#13;
Band-O-Rama Mesang Hansen&#13;
Quickstep Band Collection&#13;
Easy to Medium. Sixteen new, easy,&#13;
diversified compositions by Ted Mesang for concert and parade performance, including overtures,&#13;
waltzes, marches, serenades, chorals and novelties.&#13;
Bathsheba Singer, arr. by Cailliet Fox Quarto Tone Poem&#13;
Medium. Interesting melodic line and&#13;
rhythm combine to paint a tonal portrait of Bathsheba, mother of King Solomon.&#13;
Battle Hymn of the Republic arr. Baroni Summy&#13;
Octavo Chorus&#13;
(SATB) and Band&#13;
Easy. An extremely&#13;
effective band-choral setting, featuring trumpets and drums. No technical difficulties in any parts.&#13;
May be used for audience participation in place of mixed chorus. Wonderful program material.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Bayou Tune Morrissey Hansen Quarto Program Easy.&#13;
song for elementary bands.&#13;
&#13;
Now Morrissey has written an original bayou&#13;
&#13;
Beowulf Beach Remick Quarto&#13;
Symphonic Sketch&#13;
MediumDifficult. A symphonic sketch based on&#13;
the earliest and greatest Anglo-Saxon epic. The mood of the merry-making in the great mead-hall&#13;
followed by the dread-filled dreams of men awaiting the battle with Grendel the dragon is most&#13;
expressively caught. Playing time 7 minutes.&#13;
Big Time March Book arr. Buchtel&#13;
Kjos Quickstep Collectionof Marches Medium Easy. Fifteen of the&#13;
favorite marches of all time by Sousa-Weldon-Hall-Chambers and others in new, simplified arrangements&#13;
Big Top Overture Bowles FitzSimons Quarto&#13;
Overture Easy. A good solid Class C or D overture&#13;
which captures in modern sound the romance and gaiety of a bygone era. Will make a limited&#13;
instrumentation sound much bigger and less-skilled musicians sound impressive. Playing time about&#13;
5 minutes.&#13;
Black Canyon of the Gunnison Erickson Bourne&#13;
Quarto Tone Poem Medium. Descriptive tone poem.&#13;
Many contrasts in rhythm and tempo. Written for and performed at the Western State College&#13;
Summer Clinic. Full score published.&#13;
Blue Horizons Cailliet Kjos Quarto Tone Poem Medium. A delightful Cailliet original composition&#13;
with a distinctive modern feeling effectively scored for the concert band.&#13;
Bluejackets on Parade&#13;
Goldman Robbins Octavo March&#13;
Medium. new march by one of America's&#13;
A&#13;
outstanding bandmasters, dedicated to the United States Navy, and arranged by Erik Leidzen.&#13;
Blues in the Band Baroni Fischer Octavo Modern Easy. This one really swings. Starts nice and easy&#13;
and gradually builds up to a rocking climax and it's so easy to play. You will want to play it&#13;
again and again.&#13;
&#13;
Bombasto Farrar Walters&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
This arrangement is somewhat&#13;
than the original due to the elimination of passing tones in a few of the melodic runs.&#13;
&#13;
easier&#13;
&#13;
Boosting The Old High School Wilkes Yoder&#13;
Kjos Quickstep SchoolSong Easy. A new band arrangement&#13;
of a well known school song with appropriate lyrics.&#13;
Brass Band Blues Hathaway&#13;
Robbins Octavo Blues Medium. An original blues composition with a&#13;
solid beat arranged by the composer for concert band in the true modern jazz idiom. A fine change&#13;
of pace on any program.&#13;
&#13;
Brazilianaire Bennett Fox Quarto Samba Moderately Easy. Native Brazilian rhythm affords an interesting musical tour with David Bennett as guide&#13;
Brigadoon Band Show&#13;
Loeweand Lerner, arr. by Lee&#13;
Fox Quickstep Band Show Easy. A half-time&#13;
band show with appropriate formations of selections and continuity from the Broadway Hit Musical&#13;
"Brigadoon".&#13;
Brighton Beach Latham Summy&#13;
Quarto Concert March&#13;
Easy. An effectively-written march with no&#13;
difficulties of range or ornamentation. Fine program material. Playing time about 3 minutes&#13;
15 seconds.&#13;
Broadway Overture&#13;
Beeler Hansen Quarto Overture Medium.&#13;
Walter Beeler recreates the moods&#13;
of the early jazz age with an overture including, "Oh By Jingo", "Apple Blossom Time", "Put Your&#13;
Arms Around Me" and "You Made Me Love You".&#13;
Bugler's Holiday Anderson Edwards Mills&#13;
Quarto Trumpet Trio Medium. Leroy Anderson's trumpet&#13;
trio transcribed for trio and band by Michael Edwards from the composer's original score. A most&#13;
effective number. Playing time 2 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
Campus Festival Overture Savino Yoder&#13;
Mills Quarto Overture Medium.Domenico Savino and Paul&#13;
Yoder have combined to create an interesting and practical overture which should make a fine&#13;
Class C contest number. Playing time 4 minutes, 40 seconds.&#13;
Campus Polka&#13;
Klein Remick Octavo Polka Easy. A fast moving rousing polka that is not difficult to&#13;
perform. Most suitable for use at pep rallies and similar lively events. Playing time 2 minutes&#13;
15 seconds.&#13;
Cantabile from Cesar Franck Symphony Gardner Staff Octavo Concert Medium.&#13;
Another fine addition&#13;
to the Staff Band Library of transcriptions from the classics. Here is a sure fire, fool proof and&#13;
practical band arrangement by Maurice Gardner.&#13;
Canyon Passage Tarver&#13;
in the west.&#13;
&#13;
Belwin Quarto Overture&#13;
&#13;
Medium.Picturing the tranquil beauty of a canyon&#13;
&#13;
Canzonetta Tschaikowsky Schinstine Southern (Texas) Quarto Program Medium to Difficult. This is&#13;
the second movement to the Tschaikowsky violin concerto in B-flat Major. Arranged as a solo for&#13;
violin, clarinet, or flute, with band accompaniment. A program number all good bands should have.&#13;
Caribeana Poole&#13;
Belwin&#13;
audience appeal.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Latin in&#13;
&#13;
Character Medium.&#13;
&#13;
An interesting concert number with&#13;
Page twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Caribbean Carnival&#13;
Bennett Kjos Quarto Paso Doble Medium.&#13;
A new Bennett original in&#13;
Paso Doble style&#13;
Sure-fireprogram opener or contest warm-up number.&#13;
&#13;
bright&#13;
&#13;
Carnival of the Animals (Second Suite) Saint Saens Cray Elkan Vogel&#13;
Quarto Collection&#13;
Medium.&#13;
Contains 1. Elephants, 2. Hens and Roosters, 3. Fossils; movements from this unusual and wellknown suite. A very effective transcription for band, catching the humorous and diffe rent instrumental&#13;
effects. A truly remarkable program number of fine musical and educational value.&#13;
Ceremonial March&#13;
Morrissey Remick Quarto Concert March&#13;
Easy. A stirring new Grand March in&#13;
the Morrissey manner. Full-bodied in tone, and resounding in a rhythmic, melodic line, this is the&#13;
perfect number for the less experienced band requ iring music for "an occasion". Playing time&#13;
4 minutes, 25 seconds.&#13;
Challenger Concert Folio For Band Frank, Hummel, Whistler Rubank&#13;
Quarto Collection Easy. Large&#13;
size concert folio suitable for second and third semester students. Third cornet, third trombone and&#13;
fourth horn parts have been left out of the standard instrumentation. Contents are unusually varied&#13;
by type of composition and style of scoring with particular thought for teaching problems. Students&#13;
will find satisfaction in playing music with a "full band sound" that is w ithin the ir comprehension.&#13;
Chorale and Alleluia&#13;
Hanson Fischer Quarto Selection&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult. Dr. Howard Hanson completed&#13;
"Chorale and Alleluia" in January, 1954, his fi rst composition for band. What a glorious&#13;
one it is. Straight forward and pleasingly non-dissonant music. No extreme ranges. No great&#13;
technical demands. Well cued. A masterpiece for band. Commissioned by Dr. Edw in Franko Goldman&#13;
for the A. B. A. Mercury Record LP No. MG/ 40011.&#13;
Christmas Greetings March arr. Walters Rubank&#13;
Quickstep March Easy. A very easy quickstep size&#13;
Christmas march medley suitable for parade or Christmas program processionals. Includes "Deck&#13;
the Hall", "Jolly Old St. Nicholas", and "O Tannenbaum".&#13;
Cielito Lindo Ortone Pro Art&#13;
Quarto Waltz Easy. A really interesting arrangement for the&#13;
beginning band. Sounds full with practically any instrumentation. Large notes for easy reading.&#13;
Cleveland Press March&#13;
Levine Gate Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
A modern march by the famous&#13;
trumpeter of NBC's Lower Basin Street show. Features interesting counter-melodies and sax section&#13;
"organ" effect. Playing time 2 minutes, 50 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Jaffe-Bonx Shapiro,Bernstein Quickstep March&#13;
use. Football field. formation included.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A favorite for either indoor or outdoor&#13;
&#13;
Come Back To Sorrento DeCurtis Walters Rubank Quarto Solo with Band Medium Easy. Solo for&#13;
B-flat Cornet or Trumpet with band accompaniment. Written so it can be p e rformed in a conventional&#13;
style or in the modern manner with lip bends, short rips, etc. Cornet playing range is in the staff&#13;
except for two or three times when the melody goes to A-flat above. Band accomp animent suitable&#13;
for Class C band.&#13;
Concerto in G-Minor for Piano (First Movement) Mendelssohn Dahnert Summy Quarto Show&#13;
Piece&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult. A transcription for piano and band of a brilliant piano show-piece. Band parts&#13;
feature woodwinds, and cross-cueing makes th is number possible for smal ler bands. Full score&#13;
available.&#13;
Cotton Bowl Sturchio Southern (Texas) Octavo March Medium. A fine concert-type march, dedicated&#13;
to Irving Dreibrodt and Frank Malone, who arranged programs for the Cotton Bowl Games for&#13;
several years. Will be used for the first time at the Bowl Game on January l , 1955.&#13;
Cuban Fantasy Kepner Summy Quarto Suite Medium&#13;
Difficult to Difficult. A brilliant Latin-American&#13;
Suite in three movements: "Native Dance", "The Sea", and "Havana Terrace". Originally written&#13;
for and performed by the Air Force Band. Excellent program material.&#13;
&#13;
Hansen Quarto Latin American Novelty Medium&#13;
Difficult. The standard LatinCumana Allen Bennett&#13;
American favorite arranged for the first time for band by David Bennett. A bril liant highlight for&#13;
your program.&#13;
Curtain At Eight&#13;
Walters Rubank Quarto Program Medium Easy. The "show tune" idiom of this&#13;
number refl ects the hurry and excitement, the gl itte r and glamour of the Show World. Medium&#13;
easy grade with the highest cornet and clarinet notes G and D respectively.&#13;
Dixieland Blues Band Book arr. by Warrington&#13;
Robbins Quickstep Collection Medium.A collection&#13;
of the best in Dixieland arranged by John Warrington for school bands. Will p rovide unusual new&#13;
material for Football Games, Basketball Games, Pep Rallies, as well as every o utdoor and indoor&#13;
school program.&#13;
Dixieland Jingle Bells Blanc&#13;
Gornston Quickstep Novelty Easy Medium. A novelty which may be&#13;
used as a Christmas number, but will . se rve at any time of the ,year when a sparkling spot is&#13;
desired on a program. Lots of appeal for audience and players. Playing time 2 minutes, 55 seconds.&#13;
Donkey Tango Mesang Hansen Octavo Novelty Medium.&#13;
The humorous story and so norous me lody&#13;
of the dancing donkey with narration, makes this a light and successful program addition for&#13;
your concert.&#13;
Dwight D. Eisenhower March&#13;
Lavalle Stargen Sole Agent, Sam Fox&#13;
Quickstep March Moderately Easy.&#13;
Based on the initials D. D. E.&#13;
Elegie Militaire Miller Belwin Quarto&#13;
Characteristic Medium. Written especial ly for the dedicatory&#13;
ceremonies of the band shell, erected on the banks of the Allegheny River in Oil City, Pennsylvania&#13;
in memory of General George C. Rickards.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Emblem of Honor&#13;
&#13;
Danburg Remick Octavo ConcertMarch Medium Difficult. An original march with&#13;
broad symphonic investiture. It's title is derived from the brief musical quotations of the bugle&#13;
call "To The Colors". Playing time 4 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Escort Of Honor Walters Rubank&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
March Easy. An excellent 6 / 8 march for parade work.&#13;
&#13;
Fall In-DeGuisto Blanco Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep March Easy.&#13;
Official marching song of the V. F. W. Also&#13;
an unusually easy and snappy march. Try this one for basketball games, marching or concert.&#13;
Singing chorus included .&#13;
&#13;
Fandango Perkins Werle Mills Quarto&#13;
Latin American Medium. A good tune cleverly arranged by&#13;
Floyd Werle to provide program material in Latin-American rhythm. Playing time 3 minutes, 40&#13;
seconds&#13;
Modulations&#13;
Walters Rubank Quickstep Fanfares Easy. At last, "bridge work" that will&#13;
enable the busy high school director to perform an entire football show without stops or drum&#13;
beats between numbers. Designed for interlude purposes between compositions in unrelated keys&#13;
when a continuous musical sequence is desired. 30 different key combinations can be "bridged"&#13;
easily regardless of the rhythms involved.&#13;
&#13;
Fanfare&#13;
&#13;
48 Stars and The Red, White and Blue&#13;
&#13;
Howard Morris Quickstep March Medium. A favorite march&#13;
with the U. S. O., and constantly programmed on Service Band Broadcasts.&#13;
&#13;
Fra Diavolo Overture&#13;
&#13;
Auber Gardner Staff Octavo Medium.Long a favorite on orchestral concerts,&#13;
this overture by the French composer Auber is certain to win equal demand and recognition for&#13;
band performance. A brilliant, colorful and practical arrangement by Maurice Gardner.&#13;
&#13;
Freedom's Foundation Loboda&#13;
&#13;
Mills Quickstep March Medium.A stirring march by Samuel Loboda,&#13;
written for and dedicated to Freedom's Foundation, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, out of respect for&#13;
its credo and its accomplishment.&#13;
&#13;
Friends of Old&#13;
&#13;
Ostling Bourne Octavo March Medium. This concert march may be used at any spot&#13;
on a program, but is especially designed for use as a concert finale, with flutes and piccolos,&#13;
cornets and trombones featured "out front".&#13;
&#13;
Gate City Weldon Walters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Medium Easy. This all-time favorite, introduces&#13;
Swanee River and Dixie, in a new practical arrangement that is playable by the average high&#13;
school band.&#13;
&#13;
The Gem Grade School Band Folio No. 1 arr. by Barnes&#13;
&#13;
Shapiro, Bernstein Quarto&#13;
Collection Very&#13;
Easy. Planned to meet a present day need for easy band material. Large Notes, Concert Size.&#13;
Excellent training material for elementary bands and interesting recreational material for junior&#13;
high bands. 8 line conductor score.&#13;
&#13;
The Gem Jamboree Combo Band Book arr. by Bennett Shapiro, Bernstein Quickstep Collection Easy.&#13;
&#13;
For parade, pep rallies, sporting events, etc. Twenty-four popular standard favorites, arranged in&#13;
simplified scoring (13 books).&#13;
God Of Our Fathers arr. by Lavalle Stargen&#13;
&#13;
Sole Agent, Sam Fox Quarto Sacred Moderately Easy.&#13;
Optional choral part. Adaptation for Band of well-known hymn. Different sections of the band&#13;
are used to give this number color, depth and stature.&#13;
&#13;
Golden Spurs Rhodes&#13;
&#13;
Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Quickstep March Medium. A new processional march from&#13;
the pen of the Music Director of the British Brigade of Guards Bands.&#13;
&#13;
Greensleeves Traditional Dillon Hansen&#13;
Quarto Folk Song&#13;
Easy. This beautiful English folk-song has&#13;
been arranged to be playable and to sound full by the youngest band .&#13;
Pageantry&#13;
Walters Rubank Quickstep March Easy. A medley&#13;
Mater", "Rambling Wreck from Georgia Tech", "The Eyes of Texas".&#13;
&#13;
Gridiron&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
college&#13;
&#13;
songs "Alma&#13;
&#13;
Gun Smoke Bennett Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep MarchEccentric Medium. The spirit of the Old West in march&#13;
tempo complete with rolling hoof-beat rhythm and pistol shots.&#13;
&#13;
Gypsy Gayety&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Mills Quarto Rhapsody Medium.&#13;
Compiled and arranged by David Bennett&#13;
in gypsy rhapsody form with a maestoso introduction, a slow 2 / 4 With an accellerando to vivace&#13;
and continuing with typical tempo variations . Excellent Class C contest number.&#13;
&#13;
Gypsy Love Song, Paraphrase from "The Fortune Teller"&#13;
&#13;
Herbert Walters Rubank Quarto Program&#13;
Medium Easy. The Gypsy Love Song is one of the best known numbers from Victor Herbert's&#13;
"Fortune Teller". Scored in march tempo, this paraphrase arrangement will be popular with both&#13;
audience and performers. Medium easy, but with many bright and unusual effects in the scoring .&#13;
&#13;
The Happy Wanderer Moller arr.&#13;
&#13;
by Heine Fox&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
employing simplified scoring of the hit song.&#13;
&#13;
Novelty Easy. A marching band arrangement&#13;
&#13;
The Happy Wanderer Moller arr&#13;
&#13;
by Yoder Fox Octavo&#13;
Novelty Easy. A concert band arrangement&#13;
of the hit song with optional choral parts (SATB, TTBB.. SSA, SAB, 2 part).&#13;
&#13;
The Harmonica Player of New Orleans Miller&#13;
&#13;
Elkan Vogel Quarto Descriptive Easy. An original and&#13;
attractive work containing catchy tunes and rhythms with the New Orleans Creole flavor.&#13;
&#13;
Haskell's Rascals Yoder Kjos Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Snare Drum Trio with Band&#13;
Medium.A novel trio for three&#13;
snare drums with band accompaniment fast and flashy&#13;
dedicated to Haskell Harr, William F.&#13;
Ludwig and Bob Buggert.&#13;
Page twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Here They Come Walters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Easy. An easy "Greeting March" containing "How&#13;
Do You Do?", "When Johnny Comes Marching Home", "Hail, Hail The Gangs All Here".&#13;
&#13;
Hey Rube Mesang&#13;
&#13;
Hansen Octavo Novelty Easy. A country caper capturing the carnival spirit and&#13;
humor in music, featuring a well-known theme. A slick, short novelty and encore number.&#13;
&#13;
Hidden Valley Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Pro Art&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy.Subtle harmonies in a skillfully constructed&#13;
composition by a master craftsman in the band field. Will prove interesting to the student, director&#13;
and audience. Class C or D.&#13;
&#13;
Hi-Falutin' Hoedown Simeone&#13;
&#13;
Shawnee Press Quarto&#13;
Concert Novelty&#13;
Medium.An imaginative and&#13;
engaging setting of the old Ozark fiddlin' tune Arkansas Traveler" which presents the theme&#13;
followed by lively variations in the form of a square dance, boogie bounce and a concert hall opus.&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
&#13;
Barbary Jackson Bourne Quarto&#13;
Selection Easy. Barbary Coast sailing tunes are given an&#13;
exceptionally lyrical treatment in this Leroy Jackson arrangement. Especially good for young bands.&#13;
Full score published.&#13;
&#13;
High Plateaus Nyquist Belwin Quarto Overture Medium.&#13;
&#13;
An effective overture, colorful, interesting&#13;
&#13;
and of rare tonal beauty.&#13;
Hostrauser's&#13;
Chambers Walters Rubank Quickstep March MediumEasy. This arrangement is scored&#13;
a minor third lower than the original, and in a brighter key which makes it easier for all sections&#13;
of the band.&#13;
Huckleberry Finn Beeler&#13;
&#13;
Hansen Quarto Program Easy. A rollicking, picturesque instrumental portrait&#13;
of the Mark Twain character.&#13;
&#13;
of Praise Mozart Tolmage Staff Octavo&#13;
Concert Easy. A new adaption of Mozart's "Ave&#13;
Verum". May be used together with Staff Choral No. 207 for combined Band and Mixed Chorus.&#13;
&#13;
Hymn&#13;
&#13;
Icarus Johnson Fischer Quarto Tone&#13;
Poem&#13;
Easy. Just plain wonderful&#13;
Full sounding even with&#13;
small instrumentation. Skillfully constructed with nice contrast, interesting harmony, and very nice&#13;
melody. Full score available. Playing time 4 minutes.&#13;
In A Clock Store Vitto Fischer Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Descriptive Easy. Perfect program piece. All clocks in the&#13;
store come alive for listener as well as player. You will program it again and again if you give&#13;
it a chance to be heard. Don't miss "In A Clock Store". It's easy and fun to play.&#13;
&#13;
In The Mood Razaf Garland Shapiro,&#13;
&#13;
Bernstein&#13;
Quickstep PopularStandard&#13;
every marching band. Charles Lee Hill arrangement.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. This is a must for&#13;
&#13;
Caprice Tschaikowsky Gass Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
Easy. The beautiful and exotic&#13;
Caprice treated for the elementary band. Good classical music excellently arranged.&#13;
&#13;
Italian&#13;
&#13;
Italian&#13;
&#13;
Jazz Rhumba&#13;
&#13;
Palange Boosey Hawkes Quarto Concert and Encore Medium. A lilting Latin-American&#13;
number in the light "pops" idiom . Introduced only a few months ago, it is well on its way to&#13;
becoming an instrumental hit, both here and abroad.&#13;
&#13;
Joanne Elizabeth&#13;
&#13;
Sperti Pro Art Quickstep March Easy.&#13;
&#13;
John Philip Sousa Centennial Fletcher AMP&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
A sparkling new march with a solid beat.&#13;
March Easy. A solid swinging 4/ 4 march in&#13;
&#13;
the Sousa style, for parade and concert.&#13;
John Philip Sousa Centennial March Book&#13;
arr. by Fletcher AMP&#13;
Quickstep March Book Easy. 10&#13;
original Sousa m,arches, including "King Cotton", "Stars &amp; Stripes Forever", "Semper Fidelis",&#13;
&#13;
"Washington Post", "El Capitan", "Liberty Bell", "Manhallan Beach", and others. Plus 4 new marches&#13;
by Sousa associates dedicated to the march king.&#13;
Trotter Perkins Werle&#13;
Mills Quarto Light Program&#13;
Easy to Medium. A very practical&#13;
program piece. Rhythmical, tuneful and interestingly arranged by Floyd Werle. Playing Time 2&#13;
minutes, 45 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Kentucky&#13;
&#13;
Kin Frangkiser&#13;
Fischer Quarto Overture Easy. Overture of marked contrasts and appealing melody.&#13;
Every section has a chance to shine. Much interest from beginning to end. Fine for festival, concert,&#13;
or C and D contests. Playing time 3 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
Kismet&#13;
&#13;
Borodin Beeler Hansen Quarto Overture Easy. A concert band adaptation of the song successes&#13;
from the Broadway musical hit "Kismet", based on themes of Borodin, featuring "Stranger&#13;
in Paradise", "Baubles, Bangles and Beads", etc.&#13;
&#13;
La Fiesta Paulson Pro Art Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Overture Easy. A gay, melodious work which carries the listener&#13;
to the sunny shores of Spain. An easy, full sounding overture.&#13;
&#13;
La Gazza Ladra (The Thievish Magpie)&#13;
&#13;
Rossini arr. by Cailliet Sam Fox&#13;
Quarto Overture Difficult. A&#13;
brilliant transcription of one of Rossini's most famous overtures. A major contribution to band&#13;
literature. Playing time 9 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
La Mascarada Walters Rubank Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Paso Doble&#13;
MediumEasy. A new and effective paso doble&#13;
that is not difficult at a fast tempo. All instruments are scored within a limited range a true&#13;
paso doble of medium easy difficulty.&#13;
&#13;
Landscape Akers Kjos Quarto&#13;
Scene Picturesque Easy. A really fine piece of music in the form of&#13;
a tone poem for the younger bands slow moving and melodic with a very effective harmonic&#13;
setting.&#13;
Page twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
The last Round-Up Billy Hill&#13;
Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Quickstep Popular Standard&#13;
Easy. A well-balanced&#13;
arrangement by Paul Yoder of this all-time standard favorite . Field formation included.&#13;
legions of Victory&#13;
Beeler Hansen Quarto&#13;
Concert&#13;
March Medium.&#13;
march by Walter Beeler, in a majestic cantabile style.&#13;
&#13;
An&#13;
&#13;
original,&#13;
&#13;
colorful&#13;
&#13;
concert&#13;
&#13;
liberty Bell, The&#13;
Sousa Walters Rubank Quickstep March MediumEasy. A new arrangement of this&#13;
Sousa favorite playable by the average class C band. Edited by Frank Simon.&#13;
little Bop Riding Hood Foreman Belwin&#13;
Octavo Novelty VeryEasy. Portraying this famous nursery&#13;
rhyme in a most interesting manner with a narrator.&#13;
&#13;
Buchtel Kjos Quarto Overture Easy. Buchtel's latest original overture for young bands&#13;
Lochinvar&#13;
tuneful and interesting in all parts minimum ranges for all instruments.&#13;
Londonderry Air arr. Walters&#13;
Rubank Quarto Program Easy. A special arrangement with 20th century harmony and instrumentation. The first part is marked "rubato", giving the director a free&#13;
hand in moulding the number to fit aud ience and performers , followed by a section marked "strict&#13;
tempo". Excelle nt program number for Class C band.&#13;
Los Picadores Caneva&#13;
Remick Quarto Overture Easy. An original, easy overture for symphonic band.&#13;
Ernest O. Caneva is a well-established composer and this new Spanish flavored opus adds much&#13;
to his already fine reputation . Playing time 5 minutes.&#13;
love Thoughts Pryor Johnson Rubank Octavo&#13;
Solo with band&#13;
Easy. This solo for trombone and&#13;
band is the same solo part available in sheet form. Band parts are easy, about class D. Solo part,&#13;
about grade III with a straight melodic line and no variations. On e of the earlier compositions of&#13;
Arthur Pryor.&#13;
lumberjack Overture Reed Hansen Quarto Overture Medium.&#13;
For the first time the rugged,&#13;
rollicking folk songs of the American Woodsman are arranged instrumentally in this impressive&#13;
overture for band&#13;
Main Street, U. S. A.&#13;
Morrissey Morris Quarto Overture Easy.A brilliant piece, descriptive of the&#13;
Main Street of any large American City, e xhibiting the technique and excitement for which this&#13;
composer is so famous .&#13;
Make Way For Melody Metcalf&#13;
Fillmore Quickstep March Very Easy. Another very easy march to&#13;
take its place among the other Fillmore Library greats such as "Military Escort", etc. Horns have&#13;
melody parts practically throughout. Each section has parts of interest. Fine for general use, contest,&#13;
or festival.&#13;
The Man Who Invented Music Gillis&#13;
Mills Quarto Narratorand Band&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult. A fine work&#13;
for narrator and band. The narration , a natural for young people's programs yet interesting to the&#13;
adult, by Don Gillis and Claris A. Ross. The music is imaginative, vigorous and entertaining. A high&#13;
spot in any program.&#13;
Many Times Stahl, arr. Haufrecht AMP Quickstep Popular&#13;
Waltz Easy. No matter how "Many Times"&#13;
you play this beautiful ballad, you and your audience will never tire of its haunting melody.&#13;
March For Americans&#13;
Grofe Robbins Quarto ConcertMarch Medium. An original concert march by&#13;
one of America's foremost composers with a new and stirring arrangement by David Bennett. Magnificent&#13;
finale for any concert or program . Playing time 4 minutes.&#13;
The March King L. B. Smith AMP&#13;
Quickstep 6/8 March Easy. Dedicated to John Philip Sousa. A&#13;
rousing march with a lilting trio recalling the heyday of Sousa's band.&#13;
March Nonpareil&#13;
O'Neill AMP Quickstep&#13;
part of the Sousa Centennial Series.&#13;
March On America Walters&#13;
&#13;
March Easy. Crisp alle breve march with a forward drive;&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep Easy. A very easy march utilizing America in the trio.&#13;
&#13;
A Melodic Caravan McHugh&#13;
Robbins Quarto Descriptive Medium.Five outstanding compo, itions that&#13;
s&#13;
were used in motion pictures expertly woven together by Paul Yoder to make a noteworthy addition&#13;
to the repertoire of any band. Playing time 5 minutes, 15 seconds.&#13;
Midnight Bells&#13;
Heuberger Kreisler Mesang Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
arranged for the first time in an easy band arrang e ment.&#13;
&#13;
Easy.The popular Viennese melody&#13;
&#13;
Mid-West Glory&#13;
Edwards Kjos Quickstep March Easy. This rousing new 6 / 8 March by the composer&#13;
of "Pride of the Mid-West", the hit of last year's Clinic, is equally Outstanding . Both are a "must"&#13;
for Concert Stage, Gridiron , or Parade for every caliber of band. You'll like it.&#13;
Mills "Pops" Concert Program Band Book&#13;
Buchtel Mills Quarto Program Easy. Distinctive stylings&#13;
of appealing favorites for the development of the young band . Fourteen selections sui table for&#13;
programs. An eight line conductor's score is provided.&#13;
Mississippi Mud&#13;
Cavanaugh Barris Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Hill arrangement. A real 'Swingeroo'.&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep Popular Standard&#13;
&#13;
Easy. Charles Lee&#13;
&#13;
Mister Peepers&#13;
Green Beeler Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
Easy. This most famous television program&#13;
theme song is a delight wherever performed. Here is an ideal program number for every grade of&#13;
band.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Mister Sandman&#13;
Yoder&#13;
by Paul Yoder.&#13;
&#13;
Morris Quickstep Novelty&#13;
&#13;
Easy. The successful hit song in a novelty scoring&#13;
&#13;
Moonlight&#13;
Beethoven, arr. by Finlayson&#13;
BooseyHawkes Octavo&#13;
Concertand Reading Easy. Finlayson&#13;
has transcribed sections of the First Movement of Beet hoven's "Moonlight Sonata" in the usual&#13;
exciting treatment identified with his arrangements.&#13;
Music Campers March&#13;
Akers Fischer Quickstep March Easy. Very easy march ded icated to the Ohio&#13;
Universiry Music Camp, Athens, Ohio, Charles Minell i, Conductor. Highly recommended for indoors,&#13;
outdoors, marching, or concert. Highest note in first clarinet is C, and first cornet G. No awkward&#13;
fingerings or technical difficulties.&#13;
Navy On Parade&#13;
Fultz Fischer Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
Stirring march, fine melody. Excellent contrast&#13;
Superior scoring. Dandy for parade, concert, contest, or festival.&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
New Yorker Hathaway Hansen&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Program Easy. A musical toast to New York town&#13;
utilizing "East Side, West Side", "The Bowery", and "Hot Time In The Old Town Tonight" written&#13;
for concert programming by elementary bands.&#13;
&#13;
The Nutmeggers&#13;
Osterling Bourne Octavo ConcertMarch Medium.&#13;
This young composer has given&#13;
us a "new sound" in this brilliant concert march. A program "topper" for any band, large or small.&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
God&#13;
Drake Shirl Mesang&#13;
Hansen Quarto Popular Sacred Song&#13;
Easy. A choral festival numbe r&#13;
adaptable to all choral arrangements of the song by Dr. Harry Wilson.&#13;
&#13;
The One Rose&#13;
Lyon McIntire Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Field formation included.&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep PopularStandard&#13;
&#13;
Easy. Paul Yoder arrangement&#13;
&#13;
Open Doors&#13;
Deniston Bourne&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy. An e asy overture with a great big sound.&#13;
Descriptive writing with contrasting moods and rhyth ms. A wonderful sight reading number.&#13;
Original Suite, An Jacob Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Quarto Concert Difficult. This work, orig inally published&#13;
in 1926, but unavailable for more than ten years, has been brought back into p rint this year. It is&#13;
one of the first major contributions to original band literature.&#13;
Overture In Classical Style&#13;
Carter Bourne Overture Medium.Concert overture w ith alternating fast&#13;
and slow sections. Recommended for contest and festival use. Full score publishe d .&#13;
Ozark Dawn&#13;
&#13;
Frangkiser Fischer Quarto Tone Poem&#13;
Easy. Rythmically and harmon ical ly in a semi-modern&#13;
vein. Something new and different for your festiva l or program. Fine for class C or D&#13;
contest. Eight-line full score only. Playing time 4 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Pageant For Band&#13;
Persichetti Fischer Quarto&#13;
Selection Medium Difficult. Dr. Vincent Persichetti completed&#13;
"Pageant" in January, 1953. Commissioned fo r A. B. A. by Dr. Edw in Franko Goldman.&#13;
Opens in slow tempo with horn motive that is used in both sections of the piece. Great band music.&#13;
Pajama Game&#13;
&#13;
Reed&#13;
&#13;
Hansen&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Overture&#13;
&#13;
success including "Hey There"&#13;
&#13;
Medium.&#13;
An overture based on the Broadway musical&#13;
&#13;
"Hernando's Hideaway", "Steam Heat".&#13;
&#13;
Parade of The States Combo Band Book arr. by Bennett Shapiro, Bernstein Quickstep Collection Easy.&#13;
For parade use, rall ies, sports events, etc. 12 easy a rrangements of tunes related to certain&#13;
states. For example, "Beautiful Ohio" for Ohio, etc. Melody occasionally al lotted to trombonesbaritones.&#13;
&#13;
Pavane Faure Norman&#13;
Staff Octavo Concert&#13;
Easy. This composition by Gabriel Fau re has hitherto&#13;
been unknown to the band repertoire and now becomes a welcome addition to the ever growing&#13;
catalog of fine Staff band arrangements.&#13;
Pavane Ravel Beeler Hansen&#13;
Quarto Program Easy. This delicate, sonorous Ravel composition has&#13;
been tastefully arranged in an easy manner by Wal1er Beeler&#13;
Pentatonic Fantasy Gardner&#13;
Staff Octavo Novelty Medium.A new original for Band by Maurice&#13;
Gardner. Clever and scintil lating, yet easy for the average band to perform. Here is a highly&#13;
effective show piece designed to highlight your next band program.&#13;
Persian Carnival&#13;
Barnes Bourne Quarto Concert Piece Medium.&#13;
designed for audience appeal. Effective use of percussion&#13;
tambourine, gongs, tom toms, etc. Full score published.&#13;
&#13;
A wonderf ul p rog ram number&#13;
section fea turing Greek cymbals,&#13;
&#13;
Pigskin Mambo&#13;
Reed Hansen Quickstep Novelty Medium. Here's the mambo dance&#13;
special, rousing band melody for assemblies, football and basketball programs.&#13;
&#13;
form&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Pilgrimage Rusch Belwin Quarto&#13;
Overture&#13;
Easy.A short potpourri type overture, si mple in structure&#13;
and melodic in character, all parts are limited to their easiest and most effective range.&#13;
Pinocchio Yoder&#13;
Kjos Quarto DescriptiveOverture Medium Easy. A musical portraya l of the famous&#13;
wooden puppet in Collodi's well-known story ideal program music for a ll bands.&#13;
Pleasant Valley Overture Hanson Ludwig Quarto&#13;
Overture Medium. By the composer of "Green&#13;
Meadows", it contains expressive melodies, subtle ha rmonies and comfortable ranges for all&#13;
instruments.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Polevetsian Dance Borodin Gardner&#13;
&#13;
Staff Octavo Concert Medium Easy. Here is a complete arrangement&#13;
of the recently popularized melody by Borodin. This is in keeping w ith Staff's policy of&#13;
always maintaining good taste in its transcriptions and arrangements.&#13;
&#13;
Port Royale Frangkiser Pro Art&#13;
&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy. A new descriptive ove rture of unusual interest.&#13;
Changing tempos and colorful themes make it e xcellent for program or contest use. Class C or D.&#13;
&#13;
Prairie Lament&#13;
&#13;
Walters Rubank Quarto Program Easy. The melodic line of Prairie Lament is based&#13;
on the traditional cowboy song "Oh Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie". Walters has skillfully&#13;
woven this melody into a colorful tone picture with an underlying rhythmic background character·&#13;
istic of the great Western plains.&#13;
&#13;
Prelude &amp; Fugue In F-Minor&#13;
&#13;
Bach Moehlmann FitzSimons&#13;
Quarto Prelude &amp; Fugue Medium Easy. The&#13;
latest in the series of Bach Preludes and Fugues transcribed by Moehlmann. Truly great music and&#13;
a wonde rful e xperience for bandsmen. A welcome relief for "non-melodic" instruments, but&#13;
sufficiently cued for solidity. Will give an almost unbelievably beautiful tone to the band.&#13;
&#13;
Prelude and Rondo from "Suite for Band" Tuthill Summy Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Suite Medium Difficult to Difficult.&#13;
First and last movements of the "Suite for Band". Other two movements available on rental from&#13;
the publisher. Winner of the Columbia University Prize in 1947. Excellent for concert. Full score&#13;
available.&#13;
&#13;
Prince Valiant Mesang Hansen&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep Overture Easy. Chivalrous knighthoo d in its many heroic&#13;
musical colors. An e xtremely easy, delightful overture for young bands.&#13;
&#13;
Reeds In Front&#13;
&#13;
Walters Rubank Quickstep&#13;
throughout this march.&#13;
&#13;
March Easy.&#13;
As the title implies, the reeds&#13;
&#13;
are featured&#13;
&#13;
arr. Hathaway Bourne Quickstep Standard Pop Tunes Easy. A&#13;
collection of fourteen "standards" given the Hathaway "swing arrangement" treatment. Includes&#13;
&#13;
Romance 'N Rhythm (Band Book)&#13;
&#13;
such favorites as "All Of Me", "I'll Get By", "I Never Knew", "San Antonio Rose", "Moon Over&#13;
&#13;
Miami", "I'm Confessin' " , "Me and My Shadow", etc.&#13;
The Rompin' Stomp&#13;
&#13;
Gillis Mills Quarto Novelty Medium&#13;
Difficult. A smart Don Gillis rhythm composition&#13;
Interesting brass figures. Results will justify the work put in preparation.&#13;
&#13;
Rosary, The Nevin Walters Rubank Quarto Program Very&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A new arrangement that adds a&#13;
surprising freshness to this familiar title. A popular selection, excellent for teach ing the band&#13;
phrasing and balance between sections. Very easy, playable by second and third semester students.&#13;
&#13;
Scotch Folk Song Suite&#13;
&#13;
Davis Ludwig Quarto Suite Medium. A colorful scoring of three charming&#13;
Scotch folk songs "Auld Rob Morris", "Loch Lomond", and "John Anderson" (march with Bagpipe&#13;
effects). Excellent for Festivals, Contest or Concert use. Entertaining as well as good music.&#13;
&#13;
Shine Mack Brown Dabney Shapiro,&#13;
Bernstein Quickstep Fox&#13;
Charles Lee Hill is a must! Lively, bouncy fox trot tempo.&#13;
&#13;
Trot Easy.&#13;
&#13;
This new arrangement by&#13;
&#13;
Short'nin' Bread Special&#13;
&#13;
Hathaway Bourne Octavo Novelty Easy. An exciting novelty based on the&#13;
traditional tune. Features band using "hand clap", singing players and soloists who can "ham it&#13;
up". Optional choruses of lyrics easily memorized.&#13;
&#13;
Short Piece For Band Helbig&#13;
&#13;
Bourne Quarto Concert Medium. A 2 1/2 minute opener-very flashy&#13;
arrangement using high reeds and brasses. Modern harmonies and e xciting rhythms. Full score&#13;
published.&#13;
&#13;
Side By Side Woods&#13;
&#13;
Shapiro,Bernstein Quickstep Popular Standard Easy. A Charles Lee Hill arrangement&#13;
of this old favorite. A welcome addition to yo ur library.&#13;
&#13;
Silver Mountain Barnard&#13;
&#13;
Pro Art&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy. This fine imaginative overture will capture&#13;
and hold the interest of band and audience. Well-balanced instrumentally and rhythmically, ye t easy&#13;
to perform.&#13;
&#13;
Sir Lancelot&#13;
&#13;
Ryberg Witmark&#13;
Quarto Overture MediumDifficult. The renowned knight errant commemorated fittingly in this well-knit overture. Jean B. Ryberg, clarinetist with the Kansas City Civic&#13;
Orchestra, has effective ly caught the feeling of knighthood. A thoroughly practical and playable&#13;
concert number. Playing time 8 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Skip To My Lou&#13;
&#13;
Herfurth Bourne Octavo Folk Very&#13;
Easy. This arrangement was designed for junior&#13;
bands. Very easy, yet gives a very full sound. Published with seven-line conductor score.&#13;
&#13;
Sky Jockey Edwards Barnhouse Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
&#13;
A sparkling new march by the composer&#13;
of "Pride of the Marines". It has fin e melody throughout, enhanced by nice w ork for the heavy&#13;
instruments, together with good marching rhythm. Good enough for the best, ye t playable by the&#13;
average band.&#13;
&#13;
Slavonic Festival Scarmolin&#13;
&#13;
Belwin Quarto Overture Medium.This overture is designed to paint a&#13;
musical picture of peasant life in the Balkans. All the happy, carefree mood s of its people are&#13;
herein portrayed musical ly.&#13;
&#13;
Sleepers, Awake Bach Tolmage Staff Octavo Concert Medium&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A beautiful transcription&#13;
the organ chorale prelude by John Sebastian Bach. Arranged by Gerald Tol mage.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-n ine&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Snow Mountain&#13;
Akers Kjos Quarto Overture Easy.&#13;
An easy overture for the younger bands in the&#13;
distinctive style of Howard Akers. Clean-cut writing for all sections with e ffective dynamic contrast.&#13;
Soliloquy For Trumpet (or Cornet)&#13;
Morrissey Morris Quarto Solo Easy. A b rill iant, sty lized solo for&#13;
Trumpet or Cornet, by the very popular American composer.&#13;
Sousa Band Fraternal March&#13;
Buys AMP Quickstep March&#13;
Easy.&#13;
Commemorating the 100th Anniversary&#13;
of John Philip Sousa's birth, this snappy march carries on the Sousa tradition.&#13;
Southern Four&#13;
&#13;
Palange Presser Octavo Novelty&#13;
Medium.&#13;
Features Dixieland Combo with band accompaniment&#13;
(clarinet, tenor sax, trumpet and trombone). Splendid novelty, accompaniment is rather&#13;
easy but it requires 4 good "Dixielanders" and lots of rehearsal for finished performance.&#13;
&#13;
Southern Spirit&#13;
Mesang Southern (Texas)&#13;
Quickstep March Easy. Used as sight-reading&#13;
several states. Typically sol id, full and playable, as are all the Mesang marches.&#13;
Southland Hovey Belwin&#13;
Octavo&#13;
as on the street or field.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
march&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Medium. fine march effective in concert program as well&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Kennedy Carr Shapiro, Bernstein Quickstep&#13;
PopularStandard&#13;
Easy. Paul Yoder&#13;
South Of The Border&#13;
arrangement. Suitable for parade or football band show. Field arrangement included.&#13;
Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Quarto Concert Medium. An&#13;
Spiritual From "Symphony 5 1/2" Gillis arr. Bainum&#13;
exciting transcription for band by one of the leading band arrangers. This was first arranged and&#13;
performed from manuscript for the American Bandmasters' Association in 1952 and, now, in printed&#13;
form, is introdu'ced for the first time at the Midwest Band Clinic.&#13;
Stand By March&#13;
Castellucci Fischer Quarto&#13;
March Medium.&#13;
When Cecil B. DeMille was searching for&#13;
fine, sturdy march material for "The Greatest Show O n Earth", he turned to Louis Castellucci. The&#13;
result was this great march. Availabl e on RCA Victor records. Playing time 2 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
Sweetheart of Sigma Chi Yoder&#13;
Morris Quarto PopularStandard&#13;
Easy.The all-time favorite in a very&#13;
warm arrangement by Paul Yoder, featuring a solo fo r t rombone.&#13;
Swing with 6 and 6 Band Book arr. by Hathaway Southern (Texas) Quickstep Band Book Medium.&#13;
An excellent swing band book containing 6 well-known folk tunes and 6 best-known spirituals, all&#13;
arranged in the fine swing arrangements of Hathaway. A solid, swingy, playable book that audience&#13;
and students alike will love.&#13;
Ta-Ra-Ra Boom-Der-E Sayers Walters&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Easy. Arranged as a march, a w a ltz&#13;
and finally a swing chorus; trombone glissando use d .&#13;
Tarkio Frangkiser&#13;
Belwin Quarto&#13;
concert material.&#13;
&#13;
Overture Easy. A melodic and easy overture. Good contest and&#13;
&#13;
Tenderly&#13;
Herfurth Morris Quarto Popular Standard&#13;
simple, arrangement by Herfurth.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. The familiar standard in a romantic, yet&#13;
&#13;
School Song&#13;
Tennessee Tech Fight Song Yoder Kjos Quickstep&#13;
song with lyrics that can be adapted to your own sch ool.&#13;
&#13;
MediumEasy. A solid school fight&#13;
&#13;
Moore Southern (Texas) Quickstep Fast March Easy.&#13;
A march designed for the fast&#13;
Texas Tempo&#13;
marching band. Just the march for which many a b and director has been looking.&#13;
Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Octavo Encore or Curtain-raiser Medium.&#13;
Theatreland Strachey arr. Brown&#13;
glittering "curtain-raiser" by the composer of "These Foolish Things".&#13;
&#13;
Bright,&#13;
&#13;
Mills Quarto SeriousProgram Medium.&#13;
A t ranscription for&#13;
Theme and Variations Beethoven Reed&#13;
concert band of the theme from Beethoven's "String Quartet", Opus 18, No. 5 by H. Owen Reed.&#13;
A fine serious number for program or contest giving every section of the ban d a prominent part.&#13;
Themes from the "Nutcracker Suite" Tschaikowsky arr. by Johnson Belwin Quarto Selection Medium.&#13;
This se lection of the most popular themes from th is ballet offe rs a variety of instrumental color&#13;
and effect that make use of the full re sources of the concert ba nd.&#13;
They Were Doin' The Mambo&#13;
Yoder Morris Quickstep Novelty Easy. The first sucessful mambo which&#13;
sparked the popularity of th is form , in an authentic arrangement by Paul Yoder&#13;
&#13;
32 Marchettes Walters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep MarchFolio&#13;
Easy.An easy march folio containing the trio&#13;
of 32 standard marches arranged for sports events standard instrumentation . Two numbers are in&#13;
4 / 4 meter for processionals or half-time ceremon ies. To facilitate the planning of maneuvers a&#13;
chart in the conductors score indicates t he duration of t he other 30 titles.&#13;
&#13;
Three Cardinals Davis Ludwig&#13;
Quarto Trumpet Trio (Modern) with Band or Piano Medium.&#13;
An&#13;
attractive concert program number, includes a Blues, Bounce and Dixieland J azz Finale, within the&#13;
range of Class C or B bands but recommende d for a ny conce rt band.&#13;
Three Mood Fantasy&#13;
Sperti ProArt&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy. A varied and melodious Class D overture.&#13;
Its changing moods make this number a welcome a cidition to any program.&#13;
Quarto Program Medium. fine arrangement b y Eric Leidzen of&#13;
A&#13;
Through The Years Youmans Miller&#13;
this well-known composition, which may be played with or without a cornet or trombone solo.&#13;
Makes a fine program number. Playing time for complete arrangement 4 minutes. For solo with&#13;
optional ending 2 minutes.&#13;
Page thirty&#13;
&#13;
�REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Thunderbird Overture&#13;
&#13;
Lang Morris Quarto Descriptive Medium. Commissioned by the Pontiac High&#13;
School Band, this work contains original themes of the Indians who originally inhabited that area.&#13;
A show piece with brilliant passages for all sections of the band .&#13;
&#13;
Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks&#13;
&#13;
Strauss Walters Rubank Quarto TonePoem Medium Difficult. Adapted&#13;
to medium difficulty, playable by a class B band. The length has been cut to 8 minutes. This arrangement&#13;
is not a chopped-up medley, and will prove satisfactory to those familiar with the original.&#13;
Practical playing range for high school students. Full score available.&#13;
&#13;
To A Wild Rose&#13;
&#13;
MacDowell Norman Staff Octavo Concert Easy.&#13;
Edward MacDowell's immortal piano&#13;
piece in a new and beautiful arrangement. Scored to sound big and sonorous at the very first&#13;
reading.&#13;
&#13;
Toccata and Fugue In C&#13;
&#13;
Bach, arr. Plater Boosey Hawkes Quarto Concert Difficult. Continued . demand&#13;
for this concert number, long unavailable, has prompted its re-issue.&#13;
&#13;
Tomboy Duncan, arr. Richardson&#13;
in the light "pops" idiom.&#13;
&#13;
BooseyHawkes Octavo Encore Medium.&#13;
&#13;
A fast-moving, gay number&#13;
&#13;
Trauer-Marsch, op. 103 Mendelssohn,&#13;
&#13;
arr. by Leidzen AMP Quarto Solemn March Easy. From the&#13;
Goldman Band Library. Dignified solemn march and trio with compact, full harmonies. Effective&#13;
original band music from the 19th century.&#13;
&#13;
A Tribute To Glenn Miller Gass Hansen Quarto Overture&#13;
&#13;
Medium.There will never be a greater&#13;
exponent of American dance rhythms than the late Glenn Miller. As a tribute to this master, in&#13;
his famous style, Henry Gass has arranged an Overture including "Tuxedo Junction", "Jersey&#13;
&#13;
Bounce", "American Patrol", "Little Brown Jug".&#13;
&#13;
A Tribute To Sousa Whitney Remick Quarto&#13;
Paraphrase Medium Difficult. An exciting paraphrase&#13;
based on excerpts from some of the best known works of the world renowned composer and band&#13;
leader. Playing time 6 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
Rozsa Robbins Quarto Processional Difficult. An original composition from the&#13;
motion picture "Quo Vadis" scored for band by Erik Leidzen. It is a stirring Processional featuring&#13;
brilliantly scored brass and dynamic percussion. Can also be used as a concert march. Playing time&#13;
3 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Triumphal&#13;
&#13;
Triumphant&#13;
Herfurth Bourne Octavo Processional Very Easy. Another Herfurth arrangement for&#13;
junior bands. Especially recommended for assembly programs and graduation exercises . Seven-line&#13;
score.&#13;
&#13;
Trompette et Tambour (Opus 22) Bizet Barnes&#13;
&#13;
Bourne Quarto Concert Medium.A delightful work&#13;
by Bizet skillfully arranged by Barnes. Effective use of woodwinds and lower brasses. Full score&#13;
published.&#13;
&#13;
Truax Field Mesang&#13;
&#13;
Southern (Texas) Quickstep March Easy. The last in a series of Mesang marches&#13;
we will publish. Just as good as all the others we publish.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Tsar's Bride&#13;
Rimsky-Korsakov, arr. by Harding&#13;
Kjos Quarto Overture Medium Difficult. This&#13;
brilliant transcription of magnificent music for band has just been completed by Dr. A. A. Harding&#13;
as the most recent addition to his series of classics for the concert band.&#13;
&#13;
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star Piket AMP Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Novelty Medium.Variations for concert band on&#13;
everybody's favorite nursery tune, spiced with pungent modern harmony. Brass, woodwinds and&#13;
percussion have ample opportunity to demonstrate their sonorities.&#13;
(Bach &amp; Beethoven) Erickson Bourne&#13;
Quarto Classical Marches Easy. Two&#13;
classical marches never before published for band. "Entree" by J. S. Bach and Beethoven's "Opus&#13;
45". Excellent for contest. Full score published.&#13;
&#13;
Two Marches For Band&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Typewriter&#13;
Anderson Werle Mills Quarto Novelty Medium. Leroy Anderson's popular novelty&#13;
transcribed for band by Floyd Werle. A real typewriter part is included but alternative is provided .&#13;
An unusual and appealing number.&#13;
&#13;
Velvet Glove Spina Lang Morris&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Novelty Easy.An enticing novelty featuring the cornets and&#13;
&#13;
the clarinets .&#13;
Viennese Melody&#13;
&#13;
Gaertner Kreisler Reed Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
Vienna, based on the famous Gaertner-Kreisler melody.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A nostalgic picture of Old&#13;
&#13;
West Point Suite Milhaud AMP Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Concert&#13;
Suite Medium Difficult. Concert suite in 3 movements:&#13;
lntroduclion, Recitative, Fanfare. Commissioned for sesquicentennial celebration at West Point.&#13;
Vigorous contemporary style with brilliant fortissimo finale, by one of the world's foremost&#13;
composers.&#13;
&#13;
Whistling Boy Davis Kjos&#13;
&#13;
setting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Concert Novelty Medium Easy. An original novelty in a modern&#13;
catchy theme for whistling contrasting with full sounds in all sections.&#13;
&#13;
by Yoder Feist&#13;
Quickstep College Medley Medium. Four famous Yale College&#13;
songs arranged in a fine medley by Paul Yoder. Good for Football Games, Basketball Games, Pep&#13;
Rallies, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Yale Medley arr.&#13;
&#13;
Page thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�TO THE MID-WEST BAND CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Lyons&#13;
&#13;
Band&#13;
&#13;
Instrument Company's offices,&#13;
&#13;
showrooms and repair department are only a three&#13;
minute walk from the Sherman Hotel.&#13;
Open house will be held in our service and repair&#13;
department all during the Clinic sessions.&#13;
We hope you will come over and meet the experts&#13;
that serve you, whether it is to present some problem&#13;
that we can he lp you solve or merely to say "hello".&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
WEST&#13;
&#13;
RANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
BAND INSTRUMENT CO.&#13;
&#13;
223&#13;
&#13;
W EST&#13;
&#13;
LA K E&#13;
&#13;
ST R EET&#13;
&#13;
CHICA G O&#13;
&#13;
6 ,&#13;
&#13;
ILLI N O I S&#13;
&#13;
�</text>
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                    <text>Eighth Annual Mid-West National Band Clinic, 1954</text>
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                    <text>Stogdill, Matthew: Creator</text>
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                    <text>A digital representation of a booklet of the 8th Annual Midwest National Band Clinic. This booklet contains a schedule of the event as it spans across several days, information about participating bands and their directors, as well as programs for each band's clinic concert. There is also a section reviewing band music publications from that year.</text>
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                    <text>Event Schedule......................................Page 1&#13;
Contributors............................................Page 2&#13;
Organizations.........................................Page 3&#13;
Clinicians..................................................Page 4&#13;
Band Information and Programs... Page 6&#13;
Review of 1954 Band Publications.Page 22&#13;
Lyons Band Instrument Company.Page 32</text>
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              <text>EighthAnnual&#13;
Mid-west&#13;
&#13;
National Band Clinic&#13;
1 5,&#13;
&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
&#13;
16,&#13;
&#13;
17,&#13;
&#13;
18,&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
SHERMAN HOTEL&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIAL&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1954&#13;
&#13;
6:00 P.M.&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
Registrationon Mezzanine Floor&#13;
UnitedStates Air Force Band&#13;
Grand Ballroom (Page 7)&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.&#13;
Cass&#13;
11:00 A.M.&#13;
"How&#13;
&#13;
1: 15&#13;
3:00&#13;
&#13;
4:00&#13;
&#13;
5:30&#13;
8:00&#13;
8:45&#13;
9:15&#13;
&#13;
Technical High School Band of Detroit&#13;
Grand Ballroom (Page 9)&#13;
Would a High School Bandsman Pass An Armed Forces Band Inspection"&#13;
Lt. Col, S. E. Mear, U. S. A., Retired Grand Ballroom.&#13;
Chairman, Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Percussion Ensemble under the supervision of Robert Buggert, University of Wichita&#13;
Chairman, Haskell Harr, VanderCook College&#13;
Louis XVI Room (Take Stairway&#13;
Upone Flight)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
North&#13;
Chicago Grade School Band&#13;
Grand Ballroom (Page 11)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Rehearsal Techniques" Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin Grand&#13;
Ballroom. Ensemble from CYO Band of Chicago, Ralph J. Meltzer, Director,&#13;
Thomas Fabish, CYO Music Supervisor&#13;
Chairman, Clarence Sawhill, University of California&#13;
Trombone-Baritone Clinic, Hugh McMillen, University of Colorado&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
Chairman, Harold Bachman, University of Florida&#13;
P.M.&#13;
"The&#13;
Percussion Section Accessories"&#13;
Haskell Harr, VanderCook College&#13;
Grand&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
Chairman, William Ludwig, Jr., Chicago&#13;
"Fund Raising" Panel&#13;
Lyle Atkins, Carthage; James Keith, Pekin; F. C. Kreider,&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
Collinsville&#13;
Moderator, F. C. Kreider&#13;
P.M. VanderCook&#13;
College Reunion&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Greensboro Senior High School Band&#13;
Grand Ballroom (Page 13)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Adjudication School" at Intermission of Greensboro Band Concert&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
Adjudicators: Harold Bachman, William D. Revelli , Clarence Sawhill&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Greensboro Concert Continued&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1954&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.&#13;
10:00&#13;
&#13;
11 :00&#13;
&#13;
l :30&#13;
3:30&#13;
&#13;
4:30&#13;
5:30&#13;
8:00&#13;
8:45&#13;
9:30&#13;
&#13;
Cornet-Trumpet Clinic&#13;
Don Jacoby, Staff Trumpeter with A. B. C. Grand Ballroom&#13;
Chairman, Howard Lyons, Chicago&#13;
A.M.&#13;
Brass and Reed Ensembles from the Muskegon, Michigan, H. S. Band William&#13;
Stewart, Director&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
"Band Parents Associations and Their Functions" Panel: Paul Deland, Vice-President,&#13;
Pekin Grade School Band Parents; Robert Baldwin, President, Maine Township&#13;
H. S. Band Boosters; Charles Thompson, President, East Aurora Band Boosters&#13;
Moderator&#13;
Howard Lyons, Chicago&#13;
Louis XVI Room (Take Stairway&#13;
Up One Flight)&#13;
A.M.&#13;
"New&#13;
Sounds from the Band"&#13;
Harold Walters, Narrator&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
Chairman, H. E. Nutt, VanderCook College&#13;
Saxophone Clinic&#13;
Sigurd Rascher, Shushan, New York&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
Chairman, Miss Bessie Barnes, VanderCook College&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Davenport High School Band&#13;
Grand Ballroom (Page 15)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Brass and Reed Ensembles from the Beloit, Wisconsin , H. S. Band&#13;
Don Cuthbert,&#13;
Director&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
"How To Do 'This and That' Better" H. E. Nutt, VanderCook College&#13;
Louis XVI&#13;
Room&#13;
Chairman, Charles Peters, Joliet Grade Schools&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Clarinet&#13;
Clinic- Robert E. Lowry, Morningside College&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
Chairman, Forrest McAllister, Editor, The School Musician&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Modern&#13;
Music Masters Installation&#13;
Louis XVI Room&#13;
P.M.&#13;
VanderCook College Band&#13;
Grand Ballroom (Page 17)&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Style&#13;
Show of Band Uniforms&#13;
Grand Ballroom. Planned and Produced by George&#13;
Myers, Portage Township Senior H. S., Gary, Indiana&#13;
P.M.&#13;
VanderCook College Concert Continued&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1954&#13;
&#13;
9:00 A.M.&#13;
11 :00 A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Kiel Municipal Band&#13;
Grand Ballroom (Page 19)&#13;
The Band of the Royal Canadian Air Force Training Command&#13;
Grand Ballroom&#13;
(Page 21)&#13;
1:00 P. M. - Grand Finale Banquet&#13;
Bal Tabarin (6th Floor&#13;
Take Elevator from same Floor as&#13;
Grand Ballroom at close of R. C. A. F. Concert)&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak&#13;
Banquet Speaker&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Conductor, Goldman Band, New&#13;
York City&#13;
Price One Dollar&#13;
Official Program and Information Handbook&#13;
Please Bring Your Program to All Sessions&#13;
OneCopy Only Is Free To Each Registered Guest&#13;
&#13;
Lowry Clarinet Clinic&#13;
&#13;
Raymond F. Dvorak&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
&#13;
Lee W. Petersen&#13;
Exec .&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Nutt&#13;
VanderCook College&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Howard Lyons&#13;
Lyons Band&#13;
&#13;
Your Hosts Welcome You&#13;
To The 8th Annual&#13;
&#13;
Mid-West National Band Clinic&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
Tribute To Sousa&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
IN THE CENTENNIA L YEAR OF HIS BIRTH&#13;
&#13;
1854-1954&#13;
&#13;
William Lyons&#13;
Lyons Band&#13;
&#13;
C. L. McCreery&#13;
Lyons Band&#13;
&#13;
CONTRIBUTORS&#13;
We wish to gratefully acknowledge the generous support of the following contributors who have&#13;
helped make possible this Eighth Annual Mid-West National Band Clinic.&#13;
W. T. Armstrong Company, Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
Oskaloosa, la.&#13;
Buescher Band Instrument Co. , Elkhart, In d .&#13;
Chicago Musical Instrument Co., 30 E. Adams,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Down Beat, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Educational Music Bureau , 30 E. Adams,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Carl Fischer, Inc., 306 So. Wabash, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barnhouse,&#13;
&#13;
Gamble Hinged Music Co., 312 So. Wabash ,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Fred Gretch Manufacturing Co., 218 So. Wabash,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Frank Holton Co., 326 No. Church Street,&#13;
Elkhorn , Wis .&#13;
Humes &amp; Berg, Inc., 148th St. &amp; Railroad Ave.,&#13;
East Chicago, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
Kay Musical Instrument Co., 1640 Walnut,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Neil A. Kjos Music Co., 223 W. Lake St.,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
G. LeBlanc Co., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Martin Band Instrument Co., Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
The Pedler Co., Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
Penzel Mueller &amp; Co., Inc., 36-11 Thirty-third St.,&#13;
Long Island City, N. Y.&#13;
Reynolds Band Instrument Co., 2845 Prospect,&#13;
Cleveland, 0.&#13;
Rubank , Inc. , 5544 W. Armstrong, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Scherl &amp; Roth, 2845 Prospect, Cleveland, O.&#13;
H. &amp; A. Selmer, Inc., Elkhart, Ind .&#13;
Slingerland Drum Co., 1325 Belden Ave.,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Targ &amp; Dinner, 425 So. Wabash, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
W. F. L. Drum Co., 1728 No. Darnen, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Companies sponsoring the Band Uniform Style Show and Hosts of the Grand Finale Luncheon,&#13;
Saturday, Complimentary to Directors attending the Clinic, to whom a special Thank You is extended:&#13;
The Craddock Uniforms, 1211 Grand Avenue, Kansas City 6, Missouri&#13;
De Moulin Bros, &amp; Co., Greenville, Illinois&#13;
Fruhauf Southwest Uniform Company, 312 E. English St., Wichita , Kansas&#13;
Stanbury &amp; Company, 720 Delawa re St. , Kansas City 6 , Missouri&#13;
We wish to extend our thanks to the following men who have given much information a.nd advice&#13;
in perfecting the pages of this Official Handbook of Materials: Rodney K. Cummings of Educational&#13;
Music Bureau; Nick King of Carl Fischer, Inc.; and Gene Gamble of Gamble Hinged Music Co. We also&#13;
acknowledge the valuable contribution of Mr. George Myers and his Models of the Portage Township&#13;
Senior High School of Gary, Indiana, in preparing and presenting the Uniform Style Show.&#13;
LYONS BAND INSTRUMENT CO.&#13;
VANDERCOOK COL LEGE OF MUS IC&#13;
MEN-PLEASE CHECK YOUR WRAPS&#13;
maximum seating capacity at all times.&#13;
&#13;
Page two&#13;
&#13;
We ask this in order to insure the comfort of all and the&#13;
&#13;
MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1954&#13;
&#13;
George Myers&#13;
Portage Twp. Senior&#13;
H. S., Gary, Ind.&#13;
"Style Show"&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko&#13;
Goldman, Goldman&#13;
Band, N. Y. City .&#13;
"Banquet Speaker"&#13;
&#13;
S. E. Mear&#13;
Lt. Col. U. S. A. Ret.&#13;
"Band Inspection"&#13;
&#13;
Harold Bachman&#13;
University of&#13;
Florida&#13;
"Adjudication&#13;
School"&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Sawhill&#13;
University of&#13;
California&#13;
"Adjudication&#13;
School"&#13;
&#13;
Wm D. Revelli&#13;
University of&#13;
Michigan&#13;
"Adjudication&#13;
School"&#13;
&#13;
Organizations Which Have Appeared at the Mid-West Clinics&#13;
&#13;
1947-1953&#13;
&#13;
Barrie Collegiate Institute Band Barrie, Ontario, Canada W. Allen Fisher, Director 1952.&#13;
Beaumont Cougar Band Beaumont, California John Shafer, Director 1953.&#13;
Brownsville, Texas, High School Band James R. Murphy, Director 1950, 1952.&#13;
Catholic Youth Organization Band of Chicago Thomas F. Fabish, Director 1948, 1949.&#13;
Christian Brothers High School Band of Memphis, Tennessee Ralph G. Hale, Director 1951.&#13;
Cresbard, South Dakota, High School Band William E. Klitz, Director 1953.&#13;
Hobart, Indiana, High School Band Richard Worthington, Director 1948, 1949.&#13;
Joliet Grade School Band Charles&#13;
Peters, Director 1948.&#13;
Joliet Township High School Band Bruce Houseknecht, Director&#13;
1947, 1949.&#13;
H.C.&#13;
Wegner, Director 1951.&#13;
Lutheran High School Choir of Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Mason City, Iowa, High School Band&#13;
Paul W. Behm, Director 1952.&#13;
Miami, Florida, Senior High School Band Al G. Wright, Director 1951.&#13;
Michigan City, Indiana, Grade School Band Fred Weber, Director 1950.&#13;
Muskegon, Michigan, High School Band William Stewart, Director 1950.&#13;
Muskegon, Michigan, High School Orchestra William Stewart, Director 1952.&#13;
McAllister Memorial Band of the American Legion Joliet, Illinois A. R. McAllister, Jr., Director 1953.&#13;
Oxford, Michigan, High School Band Kenneth Bovee, Director 1951.&#13;
Plainfield Grade School Band William Johnston , Director 1951 .&#13;
Sterling Grade School Band Cloyd Meyers, Director 1952.&#13;
Territorial Staff Band of the Chicago Salvation Army Captain Bernard Smith, Director 1950, 1951, 1953.&#13;
United States Air Force Band Washington, D. C. Colonel George S. Howard, Director 1953.&#13;
VanderCook College of Music Band of Chicago Richard Brittain, Director 1947 through 1953.&#13;
Waukegan Grade School Band Bernard H. Stiner, Director 1953.&#13;
West Aurora High School Mixed Chorus Sten Halfvarson , Director 1950.&#13;
Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin, High School Band Roger Hornig, Director 1952.&#13;
Worthington, Minnesota, High School Band Ge rald Niemeyer, Director 1953.&#13;
Page three&#13;
&#13;
MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1954&#13;
&#13;
F. C. Kreider&#13;
Collinsville&#13;
&#13;
James Keith&#13;
Pekin&#13;
&#13;
''Fund&#13;
&#13;
Robert W. Buggert&#13;
University of&#13;
Wichita, Kansas&#13;
"Percussion&#13;
Ensemble"&#13;
&#13;
Raising''&#13;
&#13;
Hugh McMillen&#13;
University of&#13;
Colorado&#13;
"TromboneBaritone"&#13;
&#13;
Haskell Harr&#13;
VanderCook College&#13;
"Percussion&#13;
Accessories"&#13;
&#13;
MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1947-1953&#13;
Robert Abbott, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Baton Twirling, 1948.&#13;
Directors' Panel , 1953.&#13;
Lyle Atkins, Carthage, Illinois, Public Schools&#13;
Alfred Barthel, Former Member Chicago Symphony Orchestra Oboe, 1950.&#13;
John Beckerman, VanderCook College Flute, 1948, 1950, 1951 , 1953.&#13;
C. W. Bemer, Superintendent of Schools, Muskegon, Michigan Administrators'&#13;
Panel, 1952.&#13;
T. R. Bowman, Principal, Barrie Collegiate Institute, Ontario, Canada Administrators' Panel, 1952.&#13;
Richard Brittain, VanderCook College Clarinet, 1948, 1949.&#13;
Forrest Buchtel, VanderCook College Unusual Instruments, 1949.&#13;
Eugene Carrington, Allied Radio Corporation, Chicago&#13;
Binaural Recordings, 1952.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Cerminaro, Orange, Texas Bengal Debs Popular Orchestra, 1953.&#13;
Don Cuthbert, Beloit, Wisconsin, High School Marching Band, 1949.&#13;
Roscoe Davis, DeMoulin Bros. &amp; Co., Greenville, Illinois Style Show, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Master Ceremonies, 1947, 1948, 1950 through 1953.&#13;
of&#13;
Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Alvin Edgar, Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa Marching Band, 1948.&#13;
Ronald J. Elliott, Switzer Bros., Cleveland, Ohio Fluorescent Lighting, 1951.&#13;
Tom Fabish , CYO Band, Chicago, Illinois Saxophone, Marching Band, 1948, 1951.&#13;
L. Fruhauf, Fruhauf Southwest Uniform Co., Wichita, Kansas Style Show, 1952.&#13;
James Gross, Urbana, Illinois, High School Oboe, 1948.&#13;
Haskell Harr, VanderCook College Percussion, 1948, 1949, 1951.&#13;
Arthur Harrell, Supervisor of Music, Wichita, Kansas Forum, 1951.&#13;
Marching&#13;
Band and "Tune As You Play", 1948, 1952.&#13;
Mark Hindsley, University of Illinois&#13;
Norman Hinkley, Portage, Wisconsin, High School Directors' Panel , 1953.&#13;
Robert Hoffman, Goldman Band, New York City Clarinet, 1953.&#13;
Marguerite Hood, Past President MENC Forum, 1951.&#13;
Indiana Clarinet, 1950.&#13;
Nilo Hovey, Jordan Conservatory, Indianapolis&#13;
Colonel George S. Howard, Conductor, U. S. Air Force Band, Washington, D. C. Speaker, 1953.&#13;
David Hughes, Jordan Conservatory, Indianapolis, Indiana Orchestra, 1950.&#13;
Arnold Jacobs, Chicago Symphony Orchestra Bass, 1952.&#13;
Stefan Jones, High School, Miami, Florida Marching Band, 1950.&#13;
Lawrence Johnston, Bosse High School , Evansville, Indiana Marching Band, 1949.&#13;
William Johnston, Plainfield, Illinois, Public Schools Directors' Panel, 1953.&#13;
John Kendall , American Music Conference, Chicago&#13;
Forum, 1951 .&#13;
Everett Kessinger, University of Illinois&#13;
Marching&#13;
Band, 1953.&#13;
T. Howard Krueger, Elmhurst College, Illinois&#13;
Trombone Baritone, 1952.&#13;
Sam Lantz, Fechheimer Bros. Co., Cincinnati, Ohio Style Show, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Jesse L. Lasky, Pioneer Hollywood Movie Producer Speaker, 1952.&#13;
Jack K. Lee, University of Arizona, Tucson Marching Band, 1952.&#13;
Leeson, Cary, Illinois Saxophone,&#13;
1949.&#13;
Cecil &#13;
Clifford P. Lillya, University of Michigan Clinician, 1947.&#13;
Page four&#13;
&#13;
MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1954&#13;
&#13;
Don Jacoby&#13;
Staff Trumpeter&#13;
With A. B. C.&#13;
Cornet-Trumpet&#13;
&#13;
R. E. Lowry&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
"Clarinet&#13;
&#13;
Harold Walters&#13;
Composer&#13;
&#13;
"New Sounds"&#13;
&#13;
William Stewart&#13;
Muskegon, Mich .&#13;
&#13;
Don Cuthbert&#13;
Beloit, Wisconsin&#13;
Sigurd Rascher&#13;
Shushan, N . Y.&#13;
"Saxophone"&#13;
&#13;
'' Brass&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Reed&#13;
&#13;
Ensembles"&#13;
&#13;
MID-WEST CLINICIANS 1947-1953&#13;
W. F. Ludwig , Jr., W. F. L. Drum Co., Chicago Percussion, 1948, 1949, 1952.&#13;
W. F. Ludwig, Sr., W. F. L. Drum Co., Chicago&#13;
Percussion, 1948, 1949, 1952.&#13;
Howard Lyons, Lyons Band Instrument Co. , Chicago Clinician , 1947 through 1953.&#13;
Cornet-Trumpet, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Rafael Mendez Trumpet Virtuoso, Mexico and Hollywood&#13;
Forrest McAllister, Editor " The School Musician"- Clinician, 1949, 195 1.&#13;
C. L. McCreery, Lyons Band In strument Co., Chicago- Saxophone and Clarinet, 1948, 1949, 1951.&#13;
Hugh McMillen, University of Colorado, Boulder&#13;
Trombone-Baritone,&#13;
1950, 195 1.&#13;
Vernon Nickell , Superintendent of Public Instruction, Springfield, Illinois- Forum , 1951.&#13;
H. E. Nutt, VanderCook College, Chicago&#13;
Clinician, 1947 through 1953.&#13;
Ernest Ostwald, Uniforms by Ostwald , Staten Island, New York&#13;
Style Show, 1953.&#13;
Harry Peters, Fredonia, New York, State College&#13;
DoubleReeds, 1953.&#13;
ee&#13;
L W. Petersen, Executive Secretary, Mid-West National Band Clini c, 1947 through 1953.&#13;
Frank Piersol, Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa Marching Band, 195 1.&#13;
Clarinet, 1948, 195 1.&#13;
Lillian Poenisch, VanderCook College, Chicago&#13;
Reid Poole, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida French Horn, 1948.&#13;
Max Pottag, Former Member, Chicago Symphony Orchestra French Horn, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1953.&#13;
Dr. Sigfred Prager, University of Wisconsin, Madison&#13;
Speaker, 1947.&#13;
Sigurd Rascher, Shushan, New York&#13;
Saxophone, 1951, 1952.&#13;
William D. Revelli , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor&#13;
Clinician 1951 , 1952, 1953.&#13;
O. H. Roberts, Attorney, Evansville, Indiana&#13;
Speaker, 1949.&#13;
Harold Rogers, Valparaiso, Indiana, High School Director of Style Show, 1952, 1953.&#13;
Traugott Rohner, Editor, " The lnstrumentalist"&#13;
Marimba, 195 1.&#13;
Robert Rosevear, University of Toronto, Canada French Horn, 1951.&#13;
Acoustics,1951.&#13;
Hale J. Sabine, Celotex Corp.&#13;
Don Sartel l, Editor, " The Drum Major" Baton Twirling , 1948.&#13;
Lawrence Shepoiser, Superintendent of Schools, Mason City, Iowa Administrators' Panel, 1952.&#13;
Dr. Frank Simon, Middleton, Ohio Cornet, 1948, 1949.&#13;
Leonard B. Smith, Detroit, Michigan&#13;
Cornet-Trumpet,&#13;
1950, 1951.&#13;
Hobart Sommers, Assistant Superintendent, Chicago Public Schools Speaker, 1948.&#13;
William Stanbury, Stanbury &amp; Co., Kansas City, Missouri Style Show, 1953.&#13;
Wi lliam Stewart, Muskegon, Michigan, High School&#13;
MarchingBand, 1949, 1950.&#13;
Gilbert Waller, University of Illinois, Urbana Orchestra, 1952.&#13;
George Waln, Oberlin College, Ohio&#13;
Clarinet,1949.&#13;
Forum, 1951.&#13;
Fred Weber, Public Schools, Michigan City, Indiana&#13;
William Willett, State College, Fredonia , New York&#13;
Clarinet, 1952.&#13;
Albert Willis Executive Secretary, Illinois H. S. Association&#13;
Administrators' Pane l, 1952.&#13;
Al G. Wright, Purdue University, Indiana Marching&#13;
Band, 1950.&#13;
Beulah Zander, State Supervisor of Music, Springfield, Illinois Forum,&#13;
1951.&#13;
Avedis Zildjian Percussion, 1950.&#13;
Page five&#13;
&#13;
THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE BAND&#13;
&#13;
COLONEL GEORGE S. HOWARD, Director&#13;
&#13;
Colonel&#13;
George S. Howard&#13;
&#13;
The United States Air Force Band is a musical organization with an unsurpassed record of accomplishment&#13;
Organized in June, 1942, it has in a brief twelve years achieved a position unique in musical&#13;
i&#13;
circles and has captured the fancy and the imagination of music lovers of four continents.&#13;
High on the list of its notable achievements is the phenomenal success which it has enjoyed in the&#13;
role of a good-will ambassador. Pioneering in a theory that a musical organization could become an&#13;
ideal ambassador of a nation, the success with which its five international tours have met is nothing&#13;
short of spectacular.&#13;
The interest taken in these concerts by foreign nations is unparalleled. On some of these occasions,&#13;
the U. S. A. F. Band plays before more people in a single performance than many a musical organization&#13;
does in a period of two years. More astonish ing is the fact that these appearances have been proven&#13;
to be all-time prize crowd-gatherers exceeding any previous event regardless of its nature or magnitude.&#13;
These history breaking attendances have occurred in practically every one of the twenty six countries&#13;
in which the band has appeared. This has occasioned some sources to remark that the stadium that the&#13;
U. S. A. F. Band couldn't fill has yet to be built. Of much more importance, however, is the fact that&#13;
these concerts are met with an unduplicated enthusiasm that is reflected in popular, official and&#13;
critical acclaim.&#13;
Stressing versatility, the U. S. A. F. Band is ONE organization that is capable of resolving itself into&#13;
a 100-piece marching band, a 90-piece symphony orchestra, an 85-piece symphonic band, a 25-voice&#13;
glee club (the "Singing Sergeants"), 5 dance bands (including the "Airmen of Note" and the "Crew&#13;
Chiefs") and numerous chamber and instrumental groups. Versatility is further accented from a musical&#13;
performance standpoint inasmuch as the organization does not subscribe to the widespread belief that&#13;
a musical unit had to be either "long hair" or "jazz". It performs any given type of music with the&#13;
highest professional standard and presents programs that are designed to satisfy every appetite from&#13;
"opera" to "be-bop" from "symphony" to "swing".&#13;
Its membership has been hand-picked as the result of auditioning more than 1,400 professional&#13;
musicians. Those selected came from a wide variety of musical organizations ranging from the Philadelphia&#13;
Orchestra to the Honolulu Symphony, from the Tommy Dorsey dance band to the Arthur Pryor concert&#13;
band. Collectively, they are former members of 20 different symphony orchestras and 16 "name" dance&#13;
bands.&#13;
Frequently referred to as a "Symphony In The Sky", this colorful aggregation has presented its&#13;
internationally acclaimed art in North America, Europe, Africa and Asia. It has concertized before a total&#13;
of 10,000,000 people in the United States, Canada, England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Germany, Austria,&#13;
France, Belgium, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Denmark, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, Egypt, Libya,&#13;
French Morocco, Iceland, Newfoundland, Labrador, Trieste, Tangier and The Azores. Probably the world's&#13;
most travelled musical organization, it has appeared in 19 World capitals, Washington, Ottawa, London,&#13;
Paris, Berlin, Rome, Vienna, Brussels, Dublin, Athens, Glasgow, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Luxembourg,&#13;
Ankara, Beirut, Cairo, Reykjavik and Rabat.&#13;
It has played to 100,000 people nightly for 17 consecutive nights at Chicago's Soldier Field. At&#13;
Toronto's Exh ibition Grounds it played to 50,000 people daily for 34 days. The U. S. A. F. Band had an&#13;
audience of 130,000 people at Berlin's Olympic Stadium, 175,000 people at New York's ldlewild Airport&#13;
while at Soesterburg, Holland it played to a record breaking 250,000 people. It holds additional&#13;
attendance records at London's Royal Festival Hall, Edinburgh's Princess Gate Gardens, Dublin's Theatre&#13;
Royal, Glasgow's Green's Playhouse, Copenhagen's Tivoli Gardens, Chester (Wales) City Square,&#13;
Trieste's San Giusto Castle, Luxembourg's Place D'Armes, Bordeaux' Jardin Publique, Nurnburg's Hau pt&#13;
Marktplatz, Linz' Hauptplatz, Passau's Nibelungen Hall, Heidelberg's Thingstaette, Chaumont's Stade&#13;
Voltaire, Nancy's Jardin Publique, Beirut's Hippodrome, Cairo's Republic Square, Bonn's Stadtpark,&#13;
Regensburg's RT Field, Stuttgart's Palace Square, Wiesbaden's Kurpark, Tangier's Marshan Stadium and&#13;
Washington's Capitol Plaza.&#13;
Having the distinction of being the only American musical organization privileged to play for the&#13;
Royal Garden Party at Buckingham Palace, the United States Air Force Band was also honored by Mr.&#13;
Leopold Stokowski who presented it with his personal band library on January 8, 1954. The USAF&#13;
Band's precision, versatility, interpretation and genuinely human appeal has made it a sensation&#13;
wherever it appears.&#13;
Page six&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 15, 1954&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE BAND&#13;
Colonel George S. Howard, Conductor&#13;
Warrant Officer Harry H. Meuser, Assistant Conductor&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1892&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1945&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1931&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1929&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Schirmer&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
191 3&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
1937&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Church&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1897&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Overture Coriolan (4101)&#13;
&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Leoncavallo&#13;
arr. Cray&#13;
Vocal Solo Prologue (Pagliacci) (4 102)&#13;
Schirmer&#13;
M/ Sgt. William Jones, Baritone Soloist&#13;
Legend (4103)&#13;
Creston&#13;
Leeds&#13;
*Cuban Fantasy (4104)&#13;
Kepner&#13;
Summy&#13;
1. Native Dance&#13;
2. The Sea&#13;
3. Havana Terrace&#13;
The Singing Sergeants (4 105)&#13;
Lt. Robert L. Landers, Director&#13;
a&#13;
Medley of American Favorites&#13;
arr. Genuchi&#13;
Rodgers&#13;
With A Song In My Heart&#13;
arr. Werle&#13;
Harms&#13;
M/ Sgt. William Jones, Baritone Soloist&#13;
Elkan&#13;
Bolero (4106)&#13;
Vogel&#13;
Ravel&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
INTERMISSION&#13;
Princess Jaune (4107)&#13;
&#13;
St. Saens&#13;
Verdi&#13;
Vocal Solo LaDonna E. Mobi le (4108)&#13;
arr. Werle&#13;
S/ Sgt. William DuPree, Tenor Solo ist&#13;
&#13;
Overture&#13;
&#13;
Pierne&#13;
&#13;
March of the Little Leaden Soldiers (4109) arr. Beeler&#13;
A Feat for Clarinets Dizzy Fingers (4110) Confrey&#13;
Perkins&#13;
Two Contemporary Dances&#13;
arr. Werle&#13;
*&#13;
a. Fandango (4111 )&#13;
b. Russian Sailors Dance (411 2)&#13;
Gliere&#13;
Anderson&#13;
arr. Werle&#13;
*The Typewrite r (4113)&#13;
M/ Sgt. Edward Grace, Typewriter Soloist&#13;
A Bit of American Jazz&#13;
Hill&#13;
Gremlins Ball (4114)&#13;
March The Stars and Stripes&#13;
Forever (411 5)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
A Salute To The Armed Forces&#13;
arr. Cray&#13;
of the United States (4 116)&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
The Star Spangled Banner&#13;
Member, The United States Air Force Band.&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) a re 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 through 3 1.&#13;
Every number of all eight bands wi ll be recorded by the "On The Spot Recording Co." Directors&#13;
interested in buying any of these recordings may le ave their orders at the "On The Spot Recording Co."&#13;
booth in the Display Area outside the Grand Ballroom. Recordings will be mailed about January 15.&#13;
Grade and High School Stude nts Not Admitted Until 5 Minutes Before Concert Beg ins.&#13;
Page seven&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC AT CASS TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
1919-1954&#13;
&#13;
HARRY BEGIAN, Director of Bands&#13;
&#13;
Harry Begian&#13;
&#13;
The Cass Technical High School Concert Band of Detroit, Michigan is an integral part of one of the&#13;
most complete music curriculums in the United States. Members of this band attend a high school for&#13;
specialists in science, mechanics and arts. Although most of the Concert Band members are Music&#13;
Department majors, twenty-two are from other departments through-out the school. An education at&#13;
Cass Technical High School is geared to: (1) train the student in his specialty so that he may pursue it&#13;
upon graduation from Cass, and (2) meet all pre-requisites for college entrance. This two-fold preparation&#13;
for work or college is rather unique, and therefore Cass attracts a serious type of student. Any high&#13;
school student in Detroit having a C or better scholarship record may choose to attend Cass Technical&#13;
High School.&#13;
The music program at Cass, started in 1919 by Mr. Clarence Byrn, was hailed as being far ahead&#13;
of its time. At its inception it was a four-year vocational music program designed to prepare students&#13;
for the many jobs then available in the playing field . During this era many Cass graduates joined the&#13;
professional music ranks and to this day hold envious positions in symphony orchestras, concert bands,&#13;
radio, and dance bands. At present there are fourteen members of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra who&#13;
are Cass alumni.&#13;
Sound movies and the coming of age of radio and the recording industry eliminated many of the&#13;
musical job opportunities, and it was then that the Cass Music Curriculum was changed to meet the&#13;
needs of the times. No longer was the stress towards preparing the student for the performing field&#13;
primarily, but toward securing a college preparatory diploma with special emphasis in music. This was&#13;
a realistic step toward preparing graduates for music job opportunities which seemed to be, and still&#13;
are to be found in the public and private music-teaching fields. Mr. Glenn L. Klepinger, who succeeded&#13;
Mr. Byrn as Cass Music Department Head, has been largely responsible for carrying on and further&#13;
directing this realistic approach to music job opportunities.&#13;
Students now entering Cass must pass qualifying tests in their major field, and are classified as a&#13;
String, Wind, Percussion, Piano, Harp or Vocal Major. If a student performs well enough upon entrance&#13;
into the music department, he is assigned to one of the large ensembles. Ensembles at Cass are grouped&#13;
into two categories, performing and training. The Concert Band, Symphony Orchestra, A Capella Choir&#13;
and Harp and Vocal are of the former type, while Varsity Band, Beginning Orchestra, Reserve Band, Boys&#13;
Chorus and Girls Glee Club are of the latter. Where interests of the students coincide, small ensembles are&#13;
formed which meet once a week after school.&#13;
The band gives two formal concerts each year, and features outstanding guest and student soloists on&#13;
each. The orchestra and choir also give their own concerts. All revenue from concerts goes toward&#13;
department maintenance; however, the proceeds from this year's Band Concert have helped finance the&#13;
band's appearance at the Mid-West National Band Clinic.&#13;
Although 75% of the members of the Cass Band study privately on their instruments, it is interesting&#13;
to note that twenty-seven members have only been playing since coming to Cass in the tenth grade.&#13;
Of the five double-reed players, only one had played her particular instrument before the tenth grade,&#13;
and only five of the nine flutists had any flute playing experience prior to their entrance to Cass.&#13;
Department requirements for graduation from the present three-year music curriculum include one&#13;
year of musical elements, piano, voice, and harmony. Also, the student must for one year study a minor&#13;
instrument, take a course in elementary arranging, and meet all pre-requisites for college entrance.&#13;
Harry Begian has been Director of Bands at Cass since 1947. Prior to that he directed the MacKenzie&#13;
High School Band of Detroit and was for one year a special instructor in the Band Department of Wayne&#13;
University in Detroit, Michigan. Mr. Begian has appeared with the Cass Band at the University of Michigan&#13;
Band Conductor's Workshops for 1952 and 1953, and has for the past two summers been a member of&#13;
the Summer Music Faculty of Wayne University. He has appeared as adjudicator, guest conductor, and&#13;
clinician in his native state of Michigan, and is a charter member of the ASBDA and Gamma Omicron&#13;
Chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. In addition to directing the Concert Band at Cass, Mr. Begian also&#13;
directs the Marching and Varsity Bands and teaches classes in Wind Instruments and Elementary Arranging.&#13;
Page eight&#13;
&#13;
THURSDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
9:00-10:45 A.M.&#13;
&#13;
CLINIC CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
CASS TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
Harry Begian, Director&#13;
&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
.PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Hail Detroit (4201)&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bandland&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Trauersinfonie (4202)&#13;
&#13;
Wagner&#13;
&#13;
Associated&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Rossini&#13;
&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (4205)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Fox&#13;
William D. Revelli, University of Michigan, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Toccata and Fugue in D Minor (4206)&#13;
&#13;
Bach&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Pavane for a Dead Princess (4207)&#13;
&#13;
Ravel&#13;
&#13;
Weaner&#13;
Levant&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Schuman&#13;
&#13;
Schirmer&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Beside Thy Cradle, Here I Stand (4210) Bach&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Glenn L. Klepinger, Cass Music Department Head, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1938&#13;
&#13;
Easy .&#13;
&#13;
March for Americans (421 l)&#13;
Ferde Grefe, Composer, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Robbins&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Two Woodland Sketches (4212)&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Leonard Falcone, Michigan State College, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Three Sketches for Band (4213)&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Marks&#13;
Homer La Gassey, Instrumental Music Supervisor, Detroit, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
San Francisco el Grande (4216)&#13;
Lecuona&#13;
Marks&#13;
Graham T. Overgard, Wayne University, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*Pas de Six from "William Tell" (4203)&#13;
Introduction and Samba (4204)&#13;
Don Sinta, Saxophone Soloist&#13;
&#13;
*Bugler's&#13;
&#13;
Holiday (4208)&#13;
&#13;
George Washington Bridge (4209)&#13;
&#13;
Grefe&#13;
&#13;
MacDowell-&#13;
&#13;
*Mid-West Glory (4214)&#13;
Edwards&#13;
Austyn R. Edwards, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Cortege and Scherzo (4215)&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Moussorgsky Omega&#13;
&#13;
Berceuse and Finale (4217)&#13;
&#13;
Stravinsky&#13;
&#13;
Marks&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
194 1&#13;
&#13;
Med. Diff.&#13;
&#13;
Rakes of Mallow (4218)&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Walters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Respighi&#13;
&#13;
Ricordi&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
*La Mascarada (4219)&#13;
Pines of the Appian Way (4220)&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which a re reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
Page nine&#13;
&#13;
NORTH CHICAGO GRADE SCHOOL BAND&#13;
North Chicago, Illinois&#13;
FRANK LAURIE, Director&#13;
&#13;
Frank Laurie&#13;
Since the introduction of instrumental music in the District No. 64 Grade Schools of North Chicago,&#13;
Illinois, nine years ago, the progress of this young band has been outstanding. Starting with a mere&#13;
handful of instrumentalists, the band program now boasts a yearly average of 180 members from&#13;
approximately 800 students in grades 4 through 8. Of the 180 children in the program, the groupings are&#13;
divided as follows: Concert Band, 85; Prep Band (Preparatory group) 65, and the balance in the category&#13;
of beginners.&#13;
Approximately 60% of the school district's enrollment is comprised of children of government employees (Navy, Veterans Administration, Etc.), and though these people are in the North Chicago School&#13;
District for limited periods of time, the Band program is not denied these youngsters. From year to&#13;
year, the Band Department must accept its membership loss through parent transfer along with 8th&#13;
grade graduations.&#13;
A normal year's activities for the North Chicagoans includes:&#13;
2 Public Concerts (Average attendance, 1,000)&#13;
6 Club or Group Concerts (P. T. A., Band Parents, Veterans' Hospital, etc.)&#13;
7 Parades (local and nearby communities)&#13;
District and State Solo-Ensemble Contests&#13;
District and State Band Contests&#13;
In order to meet with the band's many public appearances, Mr. Laurie conducts a part-time summer&#13;
program. This summer schedule consists of bi-weekly rehearsals for the Concert Band, sectionals for the&#13;
Prep Band, and group lessons for the Beginners.&#13;
More and better instruments are continually being added to the Band Department of North Chicago.&#13;
Nearly all of the school-owned instruments are in constant use by the Concert Band. At present the&#13;
department owns the following: 1 oboe, 1 bassoon, 2 bass clarinets, 2 baritone saxophones, 5 basses,&#13;
1 string bass, 4 baritones, 5 French Horns, 3 mellophones, and a complete set of percussion.&#13;
Assisting in the physical preparations of the Band's many functions is the enthusiastic North Chicago&#13;
Band Association, comprised of parents of all the school instrumentalists. This organization has aided the&#13;
band considerably in the purchase of many necessary items. The $500.00 annual Band budget offered by&#13;
the Board of Education is usually augmented by $1,000.00 raised by the Parent group, and $1,000.00&#13;
raised by the band at its public concerts.&#13;
Mr. Laurie, who has been the band's director the past 8 years, handles the entire Band program of&#13;
the Grade Schools. All work is done in heterogeneous groups, with each beginner and Prep Band member&#13;
receiving a total of 1 hour per week of school time for instruction. The Prep Band holds 1 rehearsal per&#13;
week (after school), beginning 6 weeks prior to its two concerts with the Concert Band. The Concert&#13;
Band members are given one sectional lesson per week on school time (35 minutes), but rehear,se an&#13;
approximate total of 5 hours per week before and after school hours.&#13;
A very small percentage of the North Chicagoans have the advantage of private lessons. With the&#13;
exception of 5 or 6 children who study privately during a school year, all the instruction is done at&#13;
school under Mr. Laurie's direction.&#13;
With the splendid cooperation of the school administration, the staff, and the community itself, this&#13;
young band is helping to weld together a community spirit that is obvious to the 12,000 residents of&#13;
North Chicago.&#13;
Evidence of the musical progress in North Chicago is shown by the beginning of a string program.&#13;
This program, with a separate instructor, was begun this school year.&#13;
On September 7, 1954, the new North Chicago Community High School opened its doors to the&#13;
community. Both Band and Choral departments of the High School are already enthusiastically under way.&#13;
Within the Concert Band, Mr. Laurie is ably assisted each year by Officers elected by the children.&#13;
The officers (President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Librarian) handle all details connected with the operation&#13;
of a successful school band. Records are kept on each Concert Band member, and those with exceptionally&#13;
good records (30 to 40 youngsters) at the end of a school year, are invited to a Band-Parent sponsored&#13;
"Trip to the City" with all expenses paid. Keeping the band active, in a variety of activities, is a prime&#13;
factor in holding the interest of the "little music masters".&#13;
Arthur J. Katzenmaier, Superintendent of Schools, made the following comments at a meeting of&#13;
parents and teachers recently:&#13;
"The band program in the North Chicago school,s has been an outstanding public relations endeavor.&#13;
It has been an excellent example of good teaching, creating a harmonious feeling between school and&#13;
the community. It seems to me 'the know-how and spirit' of the band director has been the vital factor&#13;
in bringing about such a fine program. This is teaching at its best".&#13;
Page ten&#13;
&#13;
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
1:15-2:45 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
CLINIC CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
NORTH CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, GRADE SCHOOL BAND&#13;
Frank Laurie, Director&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Cannan&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*Snow Mountain, Overture (4302)&#13;
&#13;
Akers&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Desert Star, Baritone Solo (4303)&#13;
Soloist, John Perry, Grade 8&#13;
&#13;
Davis&#13;
&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Conroe, March (4301 )&#13;
&#13;
*Tenderly (4304)&#13;
&#13;
Gross&#13;
arr. Herfurth Morris&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*Main Street, U. S. A. (4305)&#13;
&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
&#13;
Morris&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Gem Grade School Band Folio No. 1&#13;
1. Safari (4306)&#13;
2. Old Spinning Wheel (4307)&#13;
&#13;
arr. Barnes&#13;
Marteau&#13;
Hill&#13;
&#13;
Shapiro&#13;
Bernstein&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Scepter of Liberty (4308)&#13;
Olivadoti&#13;
John Paynter, Northwestern University, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
1954&#13;
Easy&#13;
Dancing Reeds (4309)&#13;
Eisch&#13;
Leonard&#13;
Clarinet Trio Penny Walkanoff, Grade 8; Mariellen Baker, Grade 7; Dorothy Stack, Grade 7&#13;
Legendary Air (4310)&#13;
&#13;
Erickson&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Our Instrumental Program at North Chicago Arthur J. Katzenmaier,&#13;
Superinte ndent of the North Chicago District No. 64 Schools&#13;
&#13;
*Aztec, Overture (4311)&#13;
La Rougette (4312)&#13;
Piano Soloist, Jeannette Benson&#13;
&#13;
Frank&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Manhattan Beach, March (4313)&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
1949&#13;
Joseph Adgate, Director of the North Chicago High School Band, Conducting&#13;
Cachuca (4314)&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Clarence Sawhill, University of California, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
* Mills "Pops" Concert Band Book&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
1. Come Back to Sorrento (4315) DeCurtis&#13;
Forrest Buchtel, Composer, Conducting&#13;
2. Orpheus In A Jam (with&#13;
apologies to Offenbach) (4316)&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
*The Adventures of Pinocchio (4317)&#13;
Paul Yoder, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*Lochinvar (4318)&#13;
&#13;
Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
&#13;
Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
Page eleven&#13;
&#13;
THE INSTRUMENT AL MUSIC PROGRAM&#13;
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA PUBLIC SCHOOLS&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT HAZELMAN, Supervisor of Instrumental M usic&#13;
and Director of the Senior High School Band&#13;
DA VI D M . ARNER, Assistant Director&#13;
GEORGE D. TOENES, Assistant Director&#13;
Herbert Hazelman&#13;
&#13;
Greensboro is situated in Piedmont, North Carolina, a section blessed with natural resources, not the&#13;
least of which is the highest percentage of school age children in the United States. Couple this circumstance with a rate of growth which has seen the city triple its population since 1930 (30,000 to 90,000)&#13;
while remaining near the bottom in per capita income, and one can appreciate the Gargantuan effort&#13;
put forth by school officials and citizens in providing an enriched school program which is second to&#13;
none in the South and which will compare favorably with any in the country.&#13;
Greensboro pioneered in the development of North Carolina's school band and orchestra movement&#13;
during the early 1920's but saw most of its highly developed program swept away during the depression&#13;
years. In 1936, the present director of the Greensboro Senior High School Band began a rebuilding&#13;
program with 13 students, instruments salvaged from pre-depression days, and a $300.00 budget. From&#13;
this humble beginning has grown a department which today includes 9 full-time and 5 part-time instrumental teachers carrying on band and orchestra work in each of the city's 22 elementary, 6 junior high,&#13;
and 2 senior high schools.&#13;
Classroom teachers, under supervision, give pre-band and pre-orchestra instrument experience to all&#13;
primary grade pupils. In the grammar grades, itinerant teachers meet bi-weekly classes in string and wind&#13;
instruments. There are bands and orchestras in all junior and senior high schools and in many cases the&#13;
directors also teach the instrument classes in their feeder schools.&#13;
The annual budget varies with needs, but once alloted by the school board, it is disbursed as the&#13;
instrumental supervisor directs. This policy has enabled the Greensboro schools to provide complete basic&#13;
instrumentation for all junior and senior high schools and a central library containing practically all band&#13;
and orchestra music published since 1935 and a complete selection of standard works. Each student&#13;
provides his own instrument for beginning class work. Changes to school-owned instruments for the&#13;
purpose of instrumentation are made in junior high school. An expert repairman in a completely equipped,&#13;
school owned shop, keeps all school-owned equipment in excellent repair through a system of preventive maintenance.&#13;
&#13;
The Greensboro Senior High School instrumental department consists of a training band of 40 relatively inexperienced players, an activities band of 60 more advanced ones, and a concert band of 100.&#13;
These groups and the 85 piece symphony orchestra each rehearse for five 50-minute periods a week&#13;
during the school day. The marching band, consisting of two identical 70 piece units, rehearses after&#13;
school during football season only.&#13;
&#13;
The flexible schedule in a school of 1600 students and a co-operative principal allow section rehearsals&#13;
during study periods. Two junior high school directors, whose schedules are so arranged, act as&#13;
assistants to the director with these small groups. Since economic factors and lack of teachers make&#13;
the taking of private lessons almost non-existent in this part of the country, this is the only individual&#13;
attention possible for bandsmen.&#13;
&#13;
The marching band presents half-time shows at all home football games and travels to out-of-town&#13;
conference games. It also accepts invitations to perform at several college games each fall. The concert&#13;
band plays the best in band literature in its four formal concerts and two school assembly programs&#13;
each year. This group also participates in the state music contest-festival and has fulfilled many&#13;
engagements as a reading band in new music clinics. The activities band furnishes music for such school&#13;
functions as basketball games, May Day, and assemblies. It also shares two of the formal evening concerts&#13;
with the concert band.&#13;
&#13;
The success of the instrumental music deoartment of Greensboro' s schools is not measured in enrollment&#13;
system, or organization, but in terms of teaching the performance of and appreciation for the&#13;
highest art&#13;
music. A degree of this success can best be noted by this fact. The administration, school&#13;
board, fellow students, and citizens of the community supplied the $7,500.00 necessary to bring this&#13;
band to the Mid-West National Band Clinic through paid admissions&#13;
to 3 band concerts!!&#13;
Page twelve&#13;
&#13;
THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 16, 1954&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
Herbert Hazelman, Director&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Choral from 32 Moravian Chorals (4401) arr. Neuman Brodt&#13;
*Theme and Variations from String&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quartet Opus 18 No. 5 (4402)&#13;
Reed&#13;
Mills&#13;
Jenkins&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Concert March, Pieces of Eight (4403)&#13;
Neff&#13;
Ditson&#13;
Frederick Fennell, Eastman School of Music, Conducting&#13;
Polacca from Second Concerto for&#13;
Weber&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Clarinet (4404)&#13;
Brown&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
Soloist, George Toenes&#13;
Bizet&#13;
*Trompette et Tambour (4405)&#13;
Barnes&#13;
Bourne&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin, Conducting&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Gillis&#13;
Bainum&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*Spiritual from Symphony 5 1/2 (4406)&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
Glen Cliffe Bainum, Conducting&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*The Man ·Who Invented Music (4407)&#13;
Gillis&#13;
Mills&#13;
David Arner, Narrator&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*The Typewriter (4408)&#13;
Werle&#13;
Mills&#13;
Traugott Rohner, Conducting&#13;
The Invincible Eagle (4409)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Presser&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Clarence Sawhill, University of California, Conducting&#13;
Wagner&#13;
Siegfried's Rhine Journey (441 0)&#13;
Cailliet&#13;
Remick&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Das Pensionat (4411)&#13;
Von Suppe Ludwig&#13;
Quarto&#13;
"Adjudication School" Harold Bachman, Clarence Sawhill, William D. Revelli&#13;
Michiaan March (4412)&#13;
Goldman&#13;
Chappell&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
William D. Revelli, University of Michigan, Conducting&#13;
*Gypsy Gayety (4413)&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Mills&#13;
Quarto&#13;
David Bennett, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Napoli (4414)&#13;
Bellstedt&#13;
Simon&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Trumpet Solo, Don Jacoby, Staff Trumpeter with A. B. C., Chicago&#13;
*Caribeana (4415)&#13;
Poole&#13;
Bel win&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Harold Bachman, University of Florida, Conducting&#13;
Offenbach&#13;
Ballet Parisien (4416)&#13;
Isaac&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Merle Isaac, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Pride of the Mid-West (4417)&#13;
Edwards&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Austyn R. Edwards, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Country Dance (4418)&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Fred&#13;
Belwin&#13;
Herbert Fred, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
*Trauer Marsch (4419)&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Leidzen&#13;
Associated&#13;
H. E. Nutt, VanderCook College, Conducting&#13;
Georgia Buck (4420)&#13;
Stringfield&#13;
Brodt&#13;
Octavo&#13;
McHugh&#13;
*A Melodic Caravan (4421)&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Yoder&#13;
Big 3&#13;
Paul Yoder, Composer, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1934&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
Adjudication Sheets used this evening are compliments of the National Interscholastic Music Activities&#13;
Commission (an Auxiliary of the MENC) 64 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago. All types of Adjudication Sheets&#13;
(Solo, Ensemble, and Organization for both Instrumental and Vocal) are available at a nominal price.&#13;
Write them for complete details.&#13;
Page thirteen&#13;
&#13;
INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC PROGRAM&#13;
DAVENPORT PUBLIC SCHOOLS&#13;
&#13;
Davenport, Iowa&#13;
F. E. MORTIBOY, Supervisor of Instrumental Music&#13;
ERNEST BEERENDS, Assistant Director&#13;
&#13;
F. E. Mortiboy&#13;
&#13;
The instrumental music program in the Davenport Public Schools begins with string classes in the&#13;
fourth grade. This is the only class instruction in the program and is continued for one year only. The&#13;
balance of instruction is given in short private lessons. Woodwind, brass and percussion students start&#13;
with lessons in the fifth grade. String pupils receive one fifteen minute lesson each week and others&#13;
receive one ten minute lesson per week. This program is carried on from the fifth grade through high&#13;
school. Elementary school bands and orchestras are maintained on an area basis, meeting once each week&#13;
after school. In junior high schools, bands and orchestras meet twice each week for fifty minute periods&#13;
in the regular school schedule. The lesson period is taken out of other class time. In high school, band&#13;
meets five periods per week; orchestra also five periods, with the wind complement meeting f or two&#13;
of those.&#13;
The school population is about 11,000, of w hich 6,500 are enrolled in the elementary (l through 6);&#13;
2,400 in three junior high schools (7-8-9); and 2,100 in senior high school (10-11-12). Enrol lment in instrumental&#13;
music will run about 300 in elementary, 250 in junior high and 175 in senior high. The&#13;
present band membership is 115. During football season this is one band, and during concert season the&#13;
group is broken into two sections three of the five days each week. As both sections meet at the same&#13;
hour, the assignment to section is very fluid and normally will run about 85 in first and 30 in second&#13;
section.&#13;
There are six instrumental teachers. In two of the junior highs, one man has both band and orchestra&#13;
with the help of a woodwind teacher one day each. He also teaches in his "feeder" elementary schools.&#13;
In one junior high there are two men, one doing band work and one orchestra, each with the usual&#13;
"feeder" elementary buildings. At present there are twelve 'elementary schools. The Supervisor of Instrumental&#13;
Music and Director of the High School Band spends most of his time at high school and has&#13;
the assistance of a string man one and one-half days and a woodwind man two and one-half days.&#13;
There is an extensive program of solo and ensemble participation in the state contest. Large groups&#13;
do not enter in the state contests, but do participate in a non-competitive two-day festival w ith two&#13;
other schools. Most of the large group competition in the last few years has been in the Chicagoland&#13;
Music Festival. winning first four times, and in the Riverview Park Mardi Gras, in which first place was&#13;
also won.&#13;
A six weeks' summer program for all elementary and junior high students includes band on two&#13;
levels, string ensemble on two levels, and beginning classes for all instruments. The high school band&#13;
has a four weeks' program which includes three park concerts, and usually winds up with a trip to&#13;
Chicago, either for the Chicagoland Festival or the Riverview Park Mardi Gras. This trip, plus the two day&#13;
festival with Burlington and Ottumwa, make up the trips for the year for the entire group.&#13;
The budget this year for new and replacement instruments is $3,500. The budget for music and repairs&#13;
is $1,340. Uniform replacement, contest and festival trips, etc. are financed from the proceeds of season&#13;
ticket sales and the annual variety minstrel show. These two activities will net about $4,250. for the&#13;
vocal and instrumental departments. Students pay for their own meals on all trips.&#13;
A very active Parents' Club takes over much of the responsibility for the annual variety show and&#13;
contributes much to the success of other projects. The school administration has been most co-operative&#13;
in all ways. A fine physical plant and money for equipment are provided. The Principals are most helpful in scheduling students for band and orchestra and for lessons. Just this year, a remodeling p roject at&#13;
the high school provided twelve sound treated practice rooms. A new junior high school, presently under&#13;
construction, will contain one of the most up-to-date music wings. Due to the combined cooperation&#13;
of school administration, faculty, directors, parents, and students, the Davenport instrumental music&#13;
program ranks with the finest in the nation.&#13;
Page fourteen&#13;
&#13;
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 17, 1954&#13;
1:30-3: 15 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
DAVENPORT, IOWA, HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
&#13;
F. E. Mortiboy, Director&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
*The Nutmeggers (450 1)&#13;
&#13;
Osterling&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
* Bathshe ba (4502)&#13;
&#13;
Singer&#13;
&#13;
Fox&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
Shostakovitch&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Tschaikowsky&#13;
&#13;
Southern&#13;
(Texas)&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
Royal Fireworks Music (4505)&#13;
&#13;
Handel&#13;
&#13;
Music Press&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Solo de Concours (4506)&#13;
Marcia Mortiboy, Clarinet Soloist&#13;
&#13;
Rabaud&#13;
&#13;
Andraud&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1913&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
The Girl I Left Behind Me (4507)&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Carnival of Venice (4508)&#13;
Sigurd Rascher, Saxophone Soloist&#13;
&#13;
arr. Rascher&#13;
&#13;
Chappell&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1936&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Belwin&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Espana Cani (45 11 )&#13;
Marquina&#13;
Ma rks&#13;
Quarto&#13;
1954&#13;
Ernest Beerends, Assistant Director, Davenport High School Band, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Finale Symphony No. 5 (4503)&#13;
*Canzonetta, Multiple Flute Solo (4504)&#13;
&#13;
Sea Chantey (4509)&#13;
Fred&#13;
Frederick Ebbs, University of Iowa, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
On The Mall (451O)&#13;
Goldman&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Goldman Band , New York City, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med . Diff.&#13;
&#13;
Hansen&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Barnhouse&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Emblem of Honor (4512)&#13;
Danburg&#13;
Remick&#13;
Harold Bachman, University of Florida, Conducting&#13;
Chora le Prelude in E Minor (4513)&#13;
&#13;
Reed&#13;
&#13;
*Sky Jockey (45 14)&#13;
Edwards&#13;
Austyn R. Edwards, Composer, Conducting&#13;
The Girl In Satin (45 15)&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
The Baton Twirler (4516)&#13;
Forrest McAllister, Con ducting&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bandland&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Prelude and Fugue in D Minor (4517)&#13;
&#13;
Bach&#13;
&#13;
FitzSimons&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Med. Easy&#13;
&#13;
Palestrina&#13;
&#13;
Elkan Vogel&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Manhattan Beach (45 18)&#13;
Paul Yoder, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Sanctus (45 19)&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 throug h 3 1.&#13;
&#13;
Every number of a ll eight bands will be recorded by the "On The Spot Recording Co." Dire actors&#13;
interested in buying any of these recordings may leave their orders at the "On The Spot Recording Co."&#13;
booth in the Display Area outside the Grand Ballroom. Recordings will be mailed about January 15.&#13;
Page fifteen&#13;
&#13;
THE VANDERCOOK COLLEGE BAND&#13;
RICHARD BRITTAIN , Director&#13;
&#13;
Richard Brittain&#13;
&#13;
The VanderCook College Band was first organized under the personal direction of Mr. H. A. VanderCook&#13;
for the purpose of studying interpretation of school band materials, demonstrating rehearsal&#13;
techniques, reading manuscript compositions of students and faculty, and improving performing ability&#13;
and musicianship of students. Because VanderCook College is a teacher training institution, the teaching&#13;
angle has always been stressed in ensemble work.&#13;
On June 1, 1954, after forty-five years on Chicago's west side, VanderCook College of Music moved&#13;
to a new temporary location at 3219 South Michigan Avenue, adjacent to the 110 acre campus being&#13;
developed by Illinois Institute of Technology. Academic and educational courses are taken at Illinois&#13;
Tech. and out of town VanderCook students are housed in the Illinois Tech dormitories and apartments,&#13;
enjoying the eating, shopping and recreation facilities of their new Commons Building.&#13;
Faculty, graduates, students, former students and friends of VanderCook are now busy in a campaign&#13;
to raise $300,000 for a new two-story fire-proof building specially designed to meet the needs of the&#13;
various subjects and activities of VanderCook College. With the facilities provided by this new building&#13;
the research and practical training program of VanderCook College will move forward with renewed&#13;
vigor.&#13;
&#13;
1954 SUMMER SESSION BAND&#13;
&#13;
VanderCook College of Music Announces Its 1955 Summer Session June 20 to July 29, 1955.&#13;
Practical and interesting courses leading to Bachelor or Master of Music Education Degrees For Band,&#13;
Orchestra and Choral Directors Outstanding Faculty Tuition $12 per Semester Hour. Approved for&#13;
Veteran Training under the G. I. Bill of Rights. Special Work in Marching Band and Band Pageantry. High&#13;
School Student Summer Program with Scholarship Rates Offered H. S. Students and 1955 Graduates .&#13;
Rooms will be reserved for everyone requesting them in the new modern dormitories and apartment&#13;
buildings of the Illinois Institute of Technology, adjoining VanderCook College. Enrollments are now&#13;
being accepted for the Spring Semester, which begins February 7, 1955; the Summer Session June 20&#13;
July 29, 1955; and the Fall Session, which begins September 12, 1955. For complete courses of study and&#13;
description of subjects, tuition fees, housing and other expenses, write to The Registrar. Please indicate&#13;
courses you are interested in: Bachelor of Music Education, Master of Music Education, Special High&#13;
School Courses.&#13;
VANDERCOOK COLLEGE OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
Page sixteen&#13;
&#13;
3219 South Michigan Avenue&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO 16, ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 17, 1954&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
VANDERCOOK COLLEGE OF MUSIC BAND, CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
Richard E. Brittain, Conductor&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
SIZE&#13;
YR. PUB. GRADE&#13;
TITLE. March Opus No. 99 (4601)&#13;
Prokofieff&#13;
Leeds&#13;
Quarto&#13;
1946&#13;
Medium&#13;
1937&#13;
Maid of Asturia Overture (4602)&#13;
Secchi&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Difficult&#13;
1948&#13;
Concerto for Trumpet (4603)&#13;
Haydn&#13;
Chappell&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
a. Andante&#13;
b. Allegro&#13;
Larry Buchtel, Soloist&#13;
Forrest L. Buchtel, Conducting&#13;
1942&#13;
Weinberger Mercury&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Czech Rhapsody (4604)&#13;
Medium&#13;
1941&#13;
La Rougette (4605)&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Mills&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Harp Soloist Miss Lorraine King, Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra&#13;
David Bennett, Composer, Conducting&#13;
Harp furnished through the courtesy of Lyon &amp; Healy, Chicago&#13;
1954&#13;
*Hi-Falutin' Hoedown (4606)&#13;
Simeone&#13;
Shawnee&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
1954&#13;
*Pageant for Band (4607)&#13;
Persichetti&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman , Goldman Band, New York City, Conducting&#13;
1954&#13;
*Haskell's Rascals (4608)&#13;
Yoder&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Medium&#13;
Percussion Soloists Haskell Harr, William Ludwig, Jr., Robert Buggert&#13;
Paul Yoder, Composer, Conducting&#13;
&#13;
Show of Band Uniforms. Planned and directed by George Myers, Portage Township&#13;
Senior High School, Gary Indiana. Models are members of Mr. Myers' Band.&#13;
Uniform Companies participating :&#13;
Fruhauf Southwest Uniform Co., Wichita, Kan.&#13;
The Craddock Uniforms, Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
De Moulin Bros. &amp; Co., Greenville, Ill.&#13;
Stanbury &amp; Company, Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
8:45 P.M.&#13;
Style&#13;
&#13;
Festal Day March (4609)&#13;
*Brazilianaire (461 OJ&#13;
&#13;
Barnhouse&#13;
Fox&#13;
Southern&#13;
*Texas Tempo March (4611)&#13;
(Texas)&#13;
Moore&#13;
Donald I. Moore, Composer, Baylor University, Conducting&#13;
*Lumberjack Overture (4612)&#13;
Reed&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Harold Bachman, University of Florida , Conducting&#13;
Davis&#13;
*Scotch Folk Song Suite (4613)&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
Albert Davis, Composer, Phoenix, Arizona, Conducting&#13;
La Chica Cubana (46 14)&#13;
&#13;
Nyquist&#13;
Belwin&#13;
H. E. Nutt, Dean of VanderCook College, Conducting&#13;
*Blues in the Band (4615)&#13;
Baroni&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Delfo Baroni, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*March King, J. P. Sousa (4616)&#13;
Smith&#13;
Associated&#13;
Leonard Smith, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*Icarus, Tone Poem (4617)&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Al Wright, Purdue University, Conducting&#13;
*Curtain At Eight (4618)&#13;
Walters&#13;
Rubank&#13;
Harold L. Walters, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*Prelude &amp; Fugue in F Minor (4619)&#13;
FitzSimons&#13;
Bach&#13;
Glen Cliffe Bainum, Conducting&#13;
*Caribbean Carnival (4620)&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Richard Worth ington, Associate Conductor, VanderCook College,&#13;
*Triumphal March (4621)&#13;
Rozsa&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Thomas Fabish , Conducting&#13;
*Pleasant Valley Overture (4622)&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
*Rompin' Stomp (4623)&#13;
Mills&#13;
Gillis&#13;
*Velvet Glove (4624)&#13;
Spina&#13;
Morris&#13;
*Ceremonial March (4625)&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
Remick&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Buchtel&#13;
&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Q uarto&#13;
&#13;
1934&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Med ium&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Conducting&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
1954&#13;
1954&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Easy&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which a re-reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
Page seventeen&#13;
&#13;
THE KIEL MUNICIPAL BAND&#13;
Kiel, Wisconsin&#13;
EDGAR P. THIESSEN, Director&#13;
&#13;
Edgar P. Thiessen&#13;
&#13;
The unique position this organization has attained in the music world is aptly expressed in this&#13;
passage from Clyde Hostetter's feature story, NOW YOUR TOWN CAN HAVE A BAND, in the June, 1953,&#13;
issue of "Pathfinder". "Kiel's 40-piece band is one of the best in the country&#13;
it's been called the&#13;
'ideal small town band'&#13;
yet the town numbers only 2, 129."&#13;
Kiel's interest in music goes back to 1886 when its first band, the Kappelle Des Kiel Musik Verein, was&#13;
organized. In 1895 it became known as the Kiel Arion Band and Orchestra, and in 1921 the Junior Arion&#13;
Band was created to further exploit the interest in music already instilled in Kiel's youth. In 1928 emerged&#13;
the Kiel Municipal Band as we know it today. Individual lessons were given until 1930, after which&#13;
the then new and rapidly developing high school music program resulted in the addition of a growing&#13;
number of members. World War II also played an important role in the band's history. The demands&#13;
of the Armed Forces depleted its ranks to such an extent that women were admitted for the first time .&#13;
Today they represent an important segment of the personnel. The fact that the present membership includes&#13;
a mother as well as three father-daughter duos bears this out.&#13;
The band has been unusually fortunate in having had only two conductors in its twenty-six year&#13;
history. J. G. Zwickey was appointed in 1928 and held the position for six years. Kiel's own Edgar&#13;
Thiessen, a product of the Junior Band, assumed the directorship at the age of 20 and at the time&#13;
was believed to be the youngest bandmaster in the state of Wisconsin as reported by "Economist&#13;
Magazine." Today four "graduates" of the Municipal Band head music departments in state high&#13;
schools.&#13;
The source of the band's personnel is not only the local high school, but also music loverls of surrounding&#13;
communities, some members driving as far as 15 miles to attend the twice-a-week rehearsals&#13;
the year around. These enthusiastic musicians are rewarded with a small annual bonus based on their&#13;
attendance. Faithful members receive further recognition in the form of 5-10-15-20 and 25 year service&#13;
awards which are presented at an annual Christmas party. Those with the best attendance are rewarded&#13;
in a special way with prizes donated by local merchants. This party and other band functions are made&#13;
possible through the co-operation of parents, husbands and wives who serve on various committees.&#13;
Such all-around community support is essential in maintaining a successful voluntary organization .&#13;
Originally the band was financed with monthly dues paid by members and local business men. Card&#13;
parties, movies, barn dances, etc. were staged to raise additional funds. These sources soon proved inadequate&#13;
and, as a result, the City Council voted an annual appropriation of $850, but as the membership&#13;
grew and the financial needs increased, it was necessary to supplement this appropriation. Since&#13;
1933 the Band and local Fire Department have sponsored a mammoth annual picnic, the proceeds of&#13;
which are shared, each organization receiving between $2,000 and $2,500.&#13;
With this well-established financial program the band now owns several of the larger and more&#13;
costly instruments as well as all uniforms, and a music library valued at $5,000. Members desiring to&#13;
purchase their own instruments are aided with financial loans.&#13;
The band's administration consists of a Board of Directors, including three business and professional&#13;
people, two band members, and its Musical Director&#13;
Exchange concerts with neighboring communities, free local indoor and outdoor concerts, some&#13;
featuring guest soloists and conductors, constitute the basic program for the year. Continued interest&#13;
is maintained with an annual trip sponsored by the band and sometimes combined with a music festival.&#13;
In recent years the band has participated in such competitive events as the Cedarburg (Wisconsin) Music&#13;
Festival, the South Milwaukee Spectacle of Music, the Waterloo (Canada) Band Festival, and the Chicagoland&#13;
Music Festival, the latter by virtue of a first place award at South Milwaukee.&#13;
The success story of the Kiel Municipal Band is typically American, combined community effort to&#13;
provide opportunities in the field of music to its citizens of all walks of life.&#13;
Page eighteen&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY FORENOON, DECEMBER 18, 1954&#13;
9:00-10:45 A.M.&#13;
&#13;
CLINIC CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
KIEL, WISCONSIN, MUNICIPAL BAND&#13;
Edgar P. Thiessen, Director&#13;
&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Spirit of Freedom (4701)&#13;
&#13;
Cooper&#13;
&#13;
Fox&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Light Cavalry (4702)&#13;
&#13;
von Suppe&#13;
&#13;
Fillmore&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1922&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Clarinet Cake (4703)&#13;
&#13;
Hermann&#13;
&#13;
E. M. S.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Bergeim&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Carter&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Harmonica Player of New Orleans (4706) Miller&#13;
&#13;
Elkan&#13;
Vogel&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Old Vienna (4704)&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Bergeim, Composer, Conducting&#13;
*Overture in Classical Style (4705)&#13;
&#13;
Thendara (4707)&#13;
&#13;
Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Wisconsin Forward Forever (4708)&#13;
&#13;
Sousa&#13;
&#13;
Harms&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin, Conducting&#13;
arr. Yoder&#13;
&#13;
Williamson&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Short Piece for Band (471 O)&#13;
&#13;
Helbig&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Campus Festival (4711)&#13;
&#13;
Savino&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Fox&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Paulson&#13;
&#13;
Pro Art&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Highlights from Oklahoma (4709)&#13;
&#13;
Golden Rule (4712)&#13;
Goldman&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Conducting&#13;
*La Fiesta (4713)&#13;
Baritone Vocal Solos (4714)&#13;
a.&#13;
&#13;
Eri Tu from the Masked Ball&#13;
&#13;
Verdi&#13;
&#13;
B. M. I.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
b.&#13;
&#13;
One Alone from Desert Song&#13;
&#13;
Romberq&#13;
&#13;
Harms&#13;
&#13;
Octavo&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
My Faith looks Up To Thee&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Rubank&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
1951&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
*High Barbary (4715)&#13;
&#13;
Jackson&#13;
&#13;
Bourne&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
*Kentucky Trotter (4716)&#13;
&#13;
Perkins&#13;
&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Green Acres (4717)&#13;
&#13;
Morrissey&#13;
&#13;
Witmark&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
New Colonial (4718) ·&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
Church&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1901&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
National Spirit (4719)&#13;
&#13;
Humel&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
Earl Thiel, Baritone Soloist&#13;
&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
Page nineteen&#13;
&#13;
THE R. C. A. F. TRAINING COMMAND BAND&#13;
FLYING OFFICER CLIFFORD HUNT, C. D., Bandmaster&#13;
&#13;
Flying Officer&#13;
Clifford Hunt&#13;
&#13;
When it comes to sweet music the Royal Canadian Air Force Training Command Band ranks among the&#13;
highest of the nation's interpreters of either the full orchestral score, martial music or the syncopated&#13;
beat.&#13;
By ordinary standards the history of the R. C. A. F. Training Command Band is not a long one. It&#13;
dates back to the days of the Second World War when, in 1940, Flying Officer Clifford Hunt, C. D.,&#13;
of Hamilton, Ontario, the present bandmaster, was given the task of gathering together and directing&#13;
a group of musicians at R. C. A. F. Station Camp Bordeon, one of the R. C. A. F.'s major flying units at&#13;
that time. After four years of playing in Canada at numerous functions in connection with the war&#13;
effort, the band proceeded overseas in 1944 where it became known as the No. 6 Bomber Group Band.&#13;
Today's Training Command Band still has a number of the original No. 6 Bomber Group Bandsmen&#13;
on its rolls and those together with others from an equally famous wartime band, the R. C. A. F. Overseas&#13;
Headquarters Band, formed the nucleus of the present band when it was organized in 1946.&#13;
A musicians band by any standard of comparison the Training Command Band has within its ranks&#13;
no less than twenty members who have played in military or other brass bands for most of their professional careers to four of these at least, those careers started at the early age of eight and have&#13;
continued uninterrupted ever since. Twelve of the members have studied at either, or through affilliation&#13;
with, the Royal Ontario Conservatory of Music at Toronto, Ontario, one of the nation's foremost musical&#13;
colleges.&#13;
More than ten members of the Training Command Band have been associated with outstanding&#13;
Canadian symphony or philharmonic orchestras. Many have played with well-known dance and entertainment organizations and list among their associations such well-known personages in the Canadian&#13;
field of Music as Mark Kenny, Bert Niosi, Paul Firman, Morgan Thomas, to mention but a few. Three&#13;
members of the band are composer-arrangers, one a vocal soloist, and one a choir-master and organist.&#13;
Over thirty-five of the forty-six members making up the full band play more than one instrument and&#13;
at least eight members play anywhere from four to seven different instruments.&#13;
Training Command Band has played numerous engagements throughout Canada and with the exception of very few weeks of the year is on continuous tour performing at various R. C. A. F. Stations&#13;
and isolated units, or fulfilling other military assignments. The band is well-known to Canadians everywhere, having played at The Canadian National Exhibition as well as at numerous fairs, civic functions&#13;
and celebrations.&#13;
Last year the band travelled by aircraft to the United Kingdom and the Continent, where it entertained American, British, French, Belgian and Netherlands personnel as well as Canadians. This tour&#13;
commenced on September 14th and the band engagements began at Fontaine belau, France on the 16th&#13;
of September. From that date onward until October 21st t he band satisfactorily completed twenty-four&#13;
engagements many of which entailed two or more concerts. These concerts covered everything from&#13;
hospital performances to outdoor concerts at such historic places as the Palace de Esplanade&#13;
Park, Metz,&#13;
France, the park of the Kaurhuis Speilbank in Baden-Baden, Germany, the town hall at Zweibruicken,&#13;
Germany, the beautiful park of Nottingham Castle in England and the famous Victoria Embankment Park&#13;
in London. During their stay in England the band had two recording sessions with the British Broadcasting Corporation . Throughout the whole tour it received the highest praise, both from those in the&#13;
musical world, as well as from service and civilian audiences. This summer the band played as the&#13;
guest band at Canada's outstanding musical f estival held at Kitchener-Waterloo.&#13;
In Canada the Training Command Band travels in its own specially designed bus and whether the&#13;
assignment is one calling for an informal concert at an Air Force unit or a gala performance in some&#13;
metropolitan center the announcement of the appearance of this band evokes wide-spread interest and&#13;
delight. Wherever the Training Command Band performs one could well paraphrase the words of&#13;
Tennyson and say "there is sweet music here"; indeed.&#13;
Page twenty&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY FORENOON, DECEMBER 18, 1954&#13;
11:00 A.M.&#13;
-12:45&#13;
&#13;
P.M.&#13;
CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
THE BAND OF THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE TRAINING COMMAND&#13;
&#13;
Flying Officer, C. O. Hunt, Bandmaster&#13;
TITLE&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER&#13;
&#13;
Introduction "Some Call It Canada" (4801) Pomeroy&#13;
March "On Parade" (4802)&#13;
Sousa&#13;
Overture "Forza del Destine" (4803) ·&#13;
Verdi&#13;
Moderne "Prima Donna" (4804)&#13;
Gould&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHER&#13;
&#13;
SIZE&#13;
&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Fischer&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
YR. PUB.&#13;
&#13;
1921&#13;
1946&#13;
1939&#13;
&#13;
Concerto for B-flat Cornet and&#13;
1942&#13;
Military Band (4805)&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Wright&#13;
Chappell&#13;
1. Allegro;&#13;
2. Canzonetta;&#13;
3. Rondo&#13;
Soloist Musician Kenneth Moore&#13;
Paraphrase on Musetta's Waltz from&#13;
Puccini&#13;
1953&#13;
La Boheme (4806)&#13;
Harding&#13;
Kjos&#13;
Quarto&#13;
W. Allen Fisher, Barrie Collegiate Institute, Barrie, Ontario, Canada, Conducting&#13;
1934&#13;
Suite from "The Nutcracker" (4807)&#13;
Tschaikowsky Fischer&#13;
Quarto&#13;
5. Dance Russe Trepak&#13;
1. Overture Miniature&#13;
2. Marche&#13;
6. Dance Chinoise&#13;
7. Dance des Mirlitons&#13;
3. Dance Arabe&#13;
8. Valse des Fleurs&#13;
4. Dance de la Fee-Dragee&#13;
Boosey&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
March "Illinois" (4808)&#13;
Goldman&#13;
Hawkes&#13;
Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Goldman Band, New York City, Conducting&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Fantasy "The Three Bears" (4809)&#13;
Coates&#13;
Chappell&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
March "L'lnfatigable" (4810)&#13;
de Celles&#13;
Maurice de Celles, Composer, Quebec, Canada, Conducting&#13;
*Suite "West Point Suite" (4811)&#13;
Milhaud&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Associated&#13;
1. Introduction;&#13;
2 . Recitative;&#13;
3. Fanfare&#13;
Quarto&#13;
*Selection "Allerseelen" (4812)&#13;
Strauss&#13;
Ludwig&#13;
Tenor Solos (4813)&#13;
1. E lucevan la Stella from La Tosca, Puccinin&#13;
2. Flower Song from Carmen&#13;
Bizet&#13;
3. Homing&#13;
del Riego-Ford&#13;
Soloist, Musician Tom Magee&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
March "Nulli Secundus" (4814)&#13;
O'Neill&#13;
Waterloo&#13;
Dr. Charles O'Neill, Conducting&#13;
Skinner&#13;
Octavo&#13;
Finale "Tap Roots" (4815)&#13;
Skinner&#13;
&#13;
GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1938&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Difficult&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
1931&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Medium&#13;
&#13;
The R. C. A. F. March Past&#13;
THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER&#13;
THE QUEEN&#13;
The Band of The Royal Canadian Air Force appears through the kind permission of Air Vice-Marshal&#13;
J. G. Kerr, C. B. E., A. F. C., C. D., Air Officer Commanding, Training Command, Royal Canadian Air&#13;
Force.&#13;
* Numbers marked (*) are 1954 publications which are reviewed on Pages 22 through 31.&#13;
1 :00 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
Grand Finale Luncheon in Bal Tabarin Room Sixth Floor. Complimentary to Directors who&#13;
have attended the entire Convention, courtesy of the following Uniform Companies:&#13;
The Craddock Uniforms, 1211 Grand Avenue, Kansas City 6, Missouri&#13;
De Moulin Bros. &amp; Co., 1070 South Fourth Street, Greenville, Illinois&#13;
Fruhauf Southwest Uniform Co., 312 E. English St., Wichita, Kansas&#13;
Stanbury &amp; Co., 210 West Eighth Street, Kansas City 6, Missouri&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
Dr. Raymond F. Dvorak, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Speaker Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Conductor of The Goldman Band, New York City&#13;
Page twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Each of the 1954 band publications listed on pages 22-31 has been reviewed by the publisher&#13;
especially for the 1954 Mid-West Handbook. Facts contained in the review are listed in the following&#13;
order: Title Composer&#13;
Publisher Size Type of Number&#13;
Grade of Difficulty Review&#13;
Abe Lincoln (Gettysburg, 1863) Gillis&#13;
Mills Quarto Narrator and Band&#13;
Medium Difficult. Lincoln's&#13;
famous address composed for concert band and narrator by the well-known American composer. An&#13;
ideal composition, effectively scored, for your special or general program .&#13;
Alaskan Night&#13;
Frangkiser Belwin&#13;
the long Alaskan nights.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy. An impressionistic composition portraying&#13;
&#13;
Allerseelen (All Souls Day) Strauss&#13;
Davis Ludwig TonePoem Quarto&#13;
Medium.&#13;
Serious music of this&#13;
favorite, great Strauss' Art song, in the form of a free setting for Band. A tone poem, of great&#13;
beauty, it demands tone control for the long tones and is Wagnerish in style. It will add another&#13;
Strauss work of worthwhile music to the Band repertoire.&#13;
All-Star Entrances and Fanfares&#13;
Bainum Yoder Kjos&#13;
Quick-Step BandBook Medium Easy. A new idea&#13;
in football band books comprising seven novel field entrances complete with individual charts and&#13;
synchronized music in every player's part.&#13;
American Cadet Castle&#13;
Pro Art Quickstep March&#13;
Easy.This snappy number will be another gem for&#13;
your marching band repertoire.&#13;
American Farmer&#13;
Beeler Hansen&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy. Walter Beeler whips "Farmer In The Dell",&#13;
"Old MacDonald Had A Farm", "The Old Oaken Bucket", "The Little Brown Church", "Billy Boy"&#13;
and "Goodnight Ladies" into a colorful school band overture. An early grade band favorite.&#13;
American Minstrel&#13;
Foster Herfurth Hansen Quarto Overture Easy. A tribute to Stephen Foster,&#13;
weaving this minstrel's best tunes into an easy, colorful fantasy arrangement by C. Paul Herfurth.&#13;
American Railroader Gass Hansen Quarto&#13;
Overture Easy. A descriptive, easy prese ntation of early&#13;
American railroading songs, including "My Lulu", "My Dads's The Engineer", and "She'll Be Comin'&#13;
Round The Mountain".&#13;
April Interlude Johnson Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy.A better than average overture for&#13;
this degree of difficulty. Contains interesting rhythms and mood changes. Approximate playing&#13;
time, 5 minutes&#13;
Asleep In The Deep&#13;
Petrie Walters Rubank Octavo Solo With Band&#13;
Easy. Solo for E-flat or BB-flat&#13;
Bass, Baritone or Baritone Saxophone. Band parts are within the range of players who have studied&#13;
1 1/2years, solo part for students with about 2 years experience. Melody is paraphrased in three&#13;
separate styles and contains no complicated patterns; effective use of pyramid scoring. Suitable&#13;
for solo by entire section with band accompaniment.&#13;
Azalea Trail&#13;
Bennett Fischer Quarto Overture Easy. Outstanding descriptive overture with interesting&#13;
harmony and rhythm throughout. Highly recommended for contest, festival, or concert. Widely used&#13;
in sight reading contests last spring. Playing time approximately 4 1/2 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Frank Rubank Octavo Overture Easy. An easy overture for program or festival performance&#13;
Aztec&#13;
suitable for students with 1 to 2 years experience. The melodies are Indian in character with interesting parts scored for all sections of the band. No complicated rhythmic patterns.&#13;
Ballade In D-Minor&#13;
Brahms Walters Rubank Quarto Program Medium Easy.&#13;
A medium easy&#13;
band arrangement of the Brahms Opus 10, No. 1 for piano. Excellent for program work or for&#13;
developing better intonation and balance, not only for the entire band, but also between the various&#13;
choirs with in the band.&#13;
Ballet Music from "William Tell" (Pas de Six) Rossini Hanson Ludwig&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Program Medium. A&#13;
Brilliant Transcription of this favorite. It is the Wedding Dance of the three couples and winds up&#13;
in wild abandon, making it an attractive program number for Class A and B bands. Has contest-festival&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
Band Combos No. 4- Beeler Gass&#13;
Hansen Quickstep Band Collection Easy to Medium. Polkas and&#13;
waltzes, originals and arrangements, for every indoor and outdoor occasion. Pep assemblies, basketball&#13;
baseball, etc., in the effective band combo scoring.&#13;
Band-O-Rama Mesang Hansen&#13;
Quickstep Band Collection&#13;
Easy to Medium. Sixteen new, easy,&#13;
diversified compositions by Ted Mesang for concert and parade performance, including overtures,&#13;
waltzes, marches, serenades, chorals and novelties.&#13;
Bathsheba Singer, arr. by Cailliet Fox Quarto Tone Poem&#13;
Medium. Interesting melodic line and&#13;
rhythm combine to paint a tonal portrait of Bathsheba, mother of King Solomon.&#13;
Battle Hymn of the Republic arr. Baroni Summy&#13;
Octavo Chorus&#13;
(SATB) and Band&#13;
Easy. An extremely&#13;
effective band-choral setting, featuring trumpets and drums. No technical difficulties in any parts.&#13;
May be used for audience participation in place of mixed chorus. Wonderful program material.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Bayou Tune Morrissey Hansen Quarto Program Easy.&#13;
song for elementary bands.&#13;
&#13;
Now Morrissey has written an original bayou&#13;
&#13;
Beowulf Beach Remick Quarto&#13;
Symphonic Sketch&#13;
MediumDifficult. A symphonic sketch based on&#13;
the earliest and greatest Anglo-Saxon epic. The mood of the merry-making in the great mead-hall&#13;
followed by the dread-filled dreams of men awaiting the battle with Grendel the dragon is most&#13;
expressively caught. Playing time 7 minutes.&#13;
Big Time March Book arr. Buchtel&#13;
Kjos Quickstep Collectionof Marches Medium Easy. Fifteen of the&#13;
favorite marches of all time by Sousa-Weldon-Hall-Chambers and others in new, simplified arrangements&#13;
Big Top Overture Bowles FitzSimons Quarto&#13;
Overture Easy. A good solid Class C or D overture&#13;
which captures in modern sound the romance and gaiety of a bygone era. Will make a limited&#13;
instrumentation sound much bigger and less-skilled musicians sound impressive. Playing time about&#13;
5 minutes.&#13;
Black Canyon of the Gunnison Erickson Bourne&#13;
Quarto Tone Poem Medium. Descriptive tone poem.&#13;
Many contrasts in rhythm and tempo. Written for and performed at the Western State College&#13;
Summer Clinic. Full score published.&#13;
Blue Horizons Cailliet Kjos Quarto Tone Poem Medium. A delightful Cailliet original composition&#13;
with a distinctive modern feeling effectively scored for the concert band.&#13;
Bluejackets on Parade&#13;
Goldman Robbins Octavo March&#13;
Medium. new march by one of America's&#13;
A&#13;
outstanding bandmasters, dedicated to the United States Navy, and arranged by Erik Leidzen.&#13;
Blues in the Band Baroni Fischer Octavo Modern Easy. This one really swings. Starts nice and easy&#13;
and gradually builds up to a rocking climax and it's so easy to play. You will want to play it&#13;
again and again.&#13;
&#13;
Bombasto Farrar Walters&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
This arrangement is somewhat&#13;
than the original due to the elimination of passing tones in a few of the melodic runs.&#13;
&#13;
easier&#13;
&#13;
Boosting The Old High School Wilkes Yoder&#13;
Kjos Quickstep SchoolSong Easy. A new band arrangement&#13;
of a well known school song with appropriate lyrics.&#13;
Brass Band Blues Hathaway&#13;
Robbins Octavo Blues Medium. An original blues composition with a&#13;
solid beat arranged by the composer for concert band in the true modern jazz idiom. A fine change&#13;
of pace on any program.&#13;
&#13;
Brazilianaire Bennett Fox Quarto Samba Moderately Easy. Native Brazilian rhythm affords an interesting musical tour with David Bennett as guide&#13;
Brigadoon Band Show&#13;
Loeweand Lerner, arr. by Lee&#13;
Fox Quickstep Band Show Easy. A half-time&#13;
band show with appropriate formations of selections and continuity from the Broadway Hit Musical&#13;
"Brigadoon".&#13;
Brighton Beach Latham Summy&#13;
Quarto Concert March&#13;
Easy. An effectively-written march with no&#13;
difficulties of range or ornamentation. Fine program material. Playing time about 3 minutes&#13;
15 seconds.&#13;
Broadway Overture&#13;
Beeler Hansen Quarto Overture Medium.&#13;
Walter Beeler recreates the moods&#13;
of the early jazz age with an overture including, "Oh By Jingo", "Apple Blossom Time", "Put Your&#13;
Arms Around Me" and "You Made Me Love You".&#13;
Bugler's Holiday Anderson Edwards Mills&#13;
Quarto Trumpet Trio Medium. Leroy Anderson's trumpet&#13;
trio transcribed for trio and band by Michael Edwards from the composer's original score. A most&#13;
effective number. Playing time 2 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
Campus Festival Overture Savino Yoder&#13;
Mills Quarto Overture Medium.Domenico Savino and Paul&#13;
Yoder have combined to create an interesting and practical overture which should make a fine&#13;
Class C contest number. Playing time 4 minutes, 40 seconds.&#13;
Campus Polka&#13;
Klein Remick Octavo Polka Easy. A fast moving rousing polka that is not difficult to&#13;
perform. Most suitable for use at pep rallies and similar lively events. Playing time 2 minutes&#13;
15 seconds.&#13;
Cantabile from Cesar Franck Symphony Gardner Staff Octavo Concert Medium.&#13;
Another fine addition&#13;
to the Staff Band Library of transcriptions from the classics. Here is a sure fire, fool proof and&#13;
practical band arrangement by Maurice Gardner.&#13;
Canyon Passage Tarver&#13;
in the west.&#13;
&#13;
Belwin Quarto Overture&#13;
&#13;
Medium.Picturing the tranquil beauty of a canyon&#13;
&#13;
Canzonetta Tschaikowsky Schinstine Southern (Texas) Quarto Program Medium to Difficult. This is&#13;
the second movement to the Tschaikowsky violin concerto in B-flat Major. Arranged as a solo for&#13;
violin, clarinet, or flute, with band accompaniment. A program number all good bands should have.&#13;
Caribeana Poole&#13;
Belwin&#13;
audience appeal.&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Latin in&#13;
&#13;
Character Medium.&#13;
&#13;
An interesting concert number with&#13;
Page twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Caribbean Carnival&#13;
Bennett Kjos Quarto Paso Doble Medium.&#13;
A new Bennett original in&#13;
Paso Doble style&#13;
Sure-fire program opener or contest warm-up number.&#13;
&#13;
bright&#13;
&#13;
Carnival of the Animals (Second Suite) Saint Saens Cray Elkan Vogel&#13;
Quarto Collection&#13;
Medium.&#13;
Contains 1. Elephants, 2. Hens and Roosters, 3. Fossils; movements from this unusual and well known suite. A very effective transcription for band, catching the humorous and diffe rent instrumental&#13;
effects. A truly remarkable program number of fine musical and educational value.&#13;
Ceremonial March&#13;
Morrissey Remick Quarto Concert March&#13;
Easy. A stirring new Grand March in&#13;
the Morrissey manner. Full-bodied in tone, and resounding in a rhythmic, melodic line, this is the&#13;
perfect number for the less experienced band requiring music for "an occasion". Playing time&#13;
4 minutes, 25 seconds.&#13;
Challenger Concert Folio For Band Frank, Hummel, Whistler Rubank&#13;
Quarto Collection Easy. Large&#13;
size concert folio suitable for second and third semester students. Third cornet, third trombone and&#13;
fourth horn parts have been left out of the standard instrumentation. Contents are unusually varied&#13;
by type of composition and style of scoring with particular thought for teaching problems. Students&#13;
will find satisfaction in playing music with a "full band sound" that is within their comprehension.&#13;
Chorale and Alleluia&#13;
Hanson Fischer Quarto Selection&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult. Dr. Howard Hanson completed&#13;
"Chorale and Alleluia" in January, 1954, his first composition for band. What a glorious&#13;
one it is. Straight forward and pleasingly non-dissonant music. No extreme ranges. No great&#13;
technical demands. Well cued. A masterpiece for band. Commissioned by Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman&#13;
for the A. B. A. Mercury Record LP No. MG/ 40011.&#13;
Christmas Greetings March arr. Walters Rubank&#13;
Quickstep March Easy. A very easy quickstep size&#13;
Christmas march medley suitable for parade or Christmas program processionals. Includes "Deck&#13;
the Hall", "Jolly Old St. Nicholas", and "O Tannenbaum".&#13;
Cielito Lindo Ortone Pro Art&#13;
Quarto Waltz Easy. A really interesting arrangement for the&#13;
beginning band. Sounds full with practically any instrumentation. Large notes for easy reading.&#13;
Cleveland Press March&#13;
Levine Gate Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
A modern march by the famous&#13;
trumpeter of NBC's Lower Basin Street show. Features interesting counter-melodies and sax section&#13;
"organ" effect. Playing time 2 minutes, 50 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Jaffe-Bonx Shapiro,Bernstein Quickstep March&#13;
use. Football field. formation included.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A favorite for either indoor or outdoor&#13;
&#13;
Come Back To Sorrento DeCurtis Walters Rubank Quarto Solo with Band Medium Easy. Solo for&#13;
B-flat Cornet or Trumpet with band accompaniment. Written so it can be performed in a conventional&#13;
style or in the modern manner with lip bends, short rips, etc. Cornet playing range is in the staff&#13;
except for two or three times when the melody goes to A-flat above. Band accomp animent suitable&#13;
for Class C band.&#13;
Concerto in G-Minor for Piano (First Movement) Mendelssohn Dahnert Summy Quarto Show&#13;
Piece&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult. A transcription for piano and band of a brilliant piano show-piece. Band parts&#13;
feature woodwinds, and cross-cueing makes th is number possible for smaller bands. Full score&#13;
available.&#13;
Cotton Bowl Sturchio Southern (Texas) Octavo March Medium. A fine concert-type march, dedicated&#13;
to Irving Dreibrodt and Frank Malone, who arranged programs for the Cotton Bowl Games for&#13;
several years. Will be used for the first time at the Bowl Game on January l , 1955.&#13;
Cuban Fantasy Kepner Summy Quarto Suite Medium&#13;
Difficult to Difficult. A brilliant Latin-American&#13;
Suite in three movements: "Native Dance", "The Sea", and "Havana Terrace". Originally written&#13;
for and performed by the Air Force Band. Excellent program material.&#13;
&#13;
Hansen Quarto Latin American Novelty Medium&#13;
Difficult. The standard LatinCumana Allen Bennett&#13;
American favorite arranged for the first time for band by David Bennett. A brilliant highlight for&#13;
your program.&#13;
Curtain At Eight&#13;
Walters Rubank Quarto Program Medium Easy. The "show tune" idiom of this&#13;
number reflects the hurry and excitement, the glitter and glamour of the Show World. Medium&#13;
easy grade with the highest cornet and clarinet notes G and D respectively.&#13;
Dixieland Blues Band Book arr. by Warrington&#13;
Robbins Quickstep Collection Medium. A collection&#13;
of the best in Dixieland arranged by John Warrington for school bands. Will provide unusual new&#13;
material for Football Games, Basketball Games, Pep Rallies, as well as every outdoor and indoor&#13;
school program.&#13;
Dixieland Jingle Bells Blanc&#13;
Gornston Quickstep Novelty Easy Medium. A novelty which may be&#13;
used as a Christmas number, but will. serve at any time of the, year when a sparkling spot is&#13;
desired on a program. Lots of appeal for audience and players. Playing time 2 minutes, 55 seconds.&#13;
Donkey Tango Mesang Hansen Octavo Novelty Medium.&#13;
The humorous story and sonorous melody&#13;
of the dancing donkey with narration, makes this a light and successful program addition for&#13;
your concert.&#13;
Dwight D. Eisenhower March&#13;
Lavalle Stargen Sole Agent, Sam Fox&#13;
Quickstep March Moderately Easy.&#13;
Based on the initials D. D. E.&#13;
Elegie Militaire Miller Belwin Quarto&#13;
Characteristic Medium. Written especially for the dedicatory&#13;
ceremonies of the band shell, erected on the banks of the Allegheny River in Oil City, Pennsylvania&#13;
in memory of General George C. Rickards.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Emblem of Honor&#13;
&#13;
Danburg Remick Octavo ConcertMarch Medium Difficult. An original march with&#13;
broad symphonic investiture. It's title is derived from the brief musical quotations of the bugle&#13;
call "To The Colors". Playing time 4 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Escort Of Honor Walters Rubank&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
March Easy. An excellent 6 / 8 march for parade work.&#13;
&#13;
Fall In-DeGuisto Blanco Fischer&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep March Easy.&#13;
Official marching song of the V. F. W. Also&#13;
an unusually easy and snappy march. Try this one for basketball games, marching or concert.&#13;
Singing chorus included .&#13;
&#13;
Fandango Perkins Werle Mills Quarto&#13;
Latin American Medium. A good tune cleverly arranged by&#13;
Floyd Werle to provide program material in Latin-American rhythm. Playing time 3 minutes, 40&#13;
seconds&#13;
Modulations&#13;
Walters Rubank Quickstep Fanfares Easy. At last, "bridge work" that will&#13;
enable the busy high school director to perform an entire football show without stops or drum&#13;
beats between numbers. Designed for interlude purposes between compositions in unrelated keys&#13;
when a continuous musical sequence is desired. 30 different key combinations can be "bridged"&#13;
easily regardless of the rhythms involved.&#13;
&#13;
Fanfare&#13;
&#13;
48 Stars and The Red, White and Blue&#13;
&#13;
Howard Morris Quickstep March Medium. A favorite march&#13;
with the U. S. O., and constantly programmed on Service Band Broadcasts.&#13;
&#13;
Fra Diavolo Overture&#13;
&#13;
Auber Gardner Staff Octavo Medium. Long a favorite on orchestral concerts,&#13;
this overture by the French composer Auber is certain to win equal demand and recognition for&#13;
band performance. A brilliant, colorful and practical arrangement by Maurice Gardner.&#13;
&#13;
Freedom's Foundation Loboda&#13;
&#13;
Mills Quickstep March Medium.A stirring march by Samuel Loboda,&#13;
written for and dedicated to Freedom's Foundation, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, out of respect for&#13;
its credo and its accomplishment.&#13;
&#13;
Friends of Old&#13;
&#13;
Ostling Bourne Octavo March Medium. This concert march may be used at any spot&#13;
on a program, but is especially designed for use as a concert finale, with flutes and piccolos,&#13;
cornets and trombones featured "out front".&#13;
&#13;
Gate City Weldon Walters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Medium Easy. This all-time favorite, introduces&#13;
Swanee River and Dixie, in a new practical arrangement that is playable by the average high&#13;
school band.&#13;
&#13;
The Gem Grade School Band Folio No. 1 arr. by Barnes&#13;
&#13;
Shapiro, Bernstein Quarto&#13;
Collection Very&#13;
Easy. Planned to meet a present day need for easy band material. Large Notes, Concert Size.&#13;
Excellent training material for elementary bands and interesting recreational material for junior&#13;
high bands. 8 line conductor score.&#13;
&#13;
The Gem Jamboree Combo Band Book arr. by Bennett Shapiro, Bernstein Quickstep Collection Easy.&#13;
&#13;
For parade, pep rallies, sporting events, etc. Twenty-four popular standard favorites, arranged in&#13;
simplified scoring (13 books).&#13;
God Of Our Fathers arr. by Lavalle Stargen&#13;
&#13;
Sole Agent, Sam Fox Quarto Sacred Moderately Easy.&#13;
Optional choral part. Adaptation for Band of well-known hymn. Different sections of the band&#13;
are used to give this number color, depth and stature.&#13;
&#13;
Golden Spurs Rhodes&#13;
&#13;
Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Quickstep March Medium. A new processional march from&#13;
the pen of the Music Director of the British Brigade of Guards Bands.&#13;
&#13;
Greensleeves Traditional Dillon Hansen&#13;
Quarto Folk Song&#13;
Easy. This beautiful English folk-song has&#13;
been arranged to be playable and to sound full by the youngest band .&#13;
Pageantry&#13;
Walters Rubank Quickstep March Easy. A medley&#13;
Mater", "Rambling Wreck from Georgia Tech", "The Eyes of Texas".&#13;
&#13;
Gridiron&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
college&#13;
&#13;
songs "Alma&#13;
&#13;
Gun Smoke Bennett Kjos&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep MarchEccentric Medium. The spirit of the Old West in march&#13;
tempo complete with rolling hoof-beat rhythm and pistol shots.&#13;
&#13;
Gypsy Gayety&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Mills Quarto Rhapsody Medium.&#13;
Compiled and arranged by David Bennett&#13;
in gypsy rhapsody form with a maestoso introduction, a slow 2 / 4 With an accellerando to vivace&#13;
and continuing with typical tempo variations . Excellent Class C contest number.&#13;
&#13;
Gypsy Love Song, Paraphrase from "The Fortune Teller"&#13;
&#13;
Herbert Walters Rubank Quarto Program&#13;
Medium Easy. The Gypsy Love Song is one of the best known numbers from Victor Herbert's&#13;
"Fortune Teller". Scored in march tempo, this paraphrase arrangement will be popular with both&#13;
audience and performers. Medium easy, but with many bright and unusual effects in the scoring .&#13;
&#13;
The Happy Wanderer Moller arr.&#13;
&#13;
by Heine Fox&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
employing simplified scoring of the hit song.&#13;
&#13;
Novelty Easy. A marching band arrangement&#13;
&#13;
The Happy Wanderer Moller arr&#13;
&#13;
by Yoder Fox Octavo&#13;
Novelty Easy. A concert band arrangement&#13;
of the hit song with optional choral parts (SATB, TTBB.. SSA, SAB, 2 part).&#13;
&#13;
The Harmonica Player of New Orleans Miller&#13;
&#13;
Elkan Vogel Quarto Descriptive Easy. An original and&#13;
attractive work containing catchy tunes and rhythms with the New Orleans Creole flavor.&#13;
&#13;
Haskell's Rascals Yoder Kjos Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Snare Drum Trio with Band&#13;
Medium. A novel trio for three&#13;
snare drums with band accompaniment fast and flashy&#13;
dedicated to Haskell Harr, William F.&#13;
Ludwig and Bob Buggert.&#13;
Page twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Here They Come Walters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Easy. An easy "Greeting March" containing "How&#13;
Do You Do?", "When Johnny Comes Marching Home", "Hail, Hail The Gangs All Here".&#13;
&#13;
Hey Rube Mesang&#13;
&#13;
Hansen Octavo Novelty Easy. A country caper capturing the carnival spirit and&#13;
humor in music, featuring a well-known theme. A slick, short novelty and encore number.&#13;
&#13;
Hidden Valley Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Pro Art&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy. Subtle harmonies in a skillfully constructed&#13;
composition by a master craftsman in the band field. Will prove interesting to the student, director&#13;
and audience. Class C or D.&#13;
&#13;
Hi-Falutin' Hoedown Simeone&#13;
&#13;
Shawnee Press Quarto&#13;
Concert Novelty&#13;
Medium.An imaginative and&#13;
engaging setting of the old Ozark fiddlin' tune Arkansas Traveler" which presents the theme&#13;
followed by lively variations in the form of a square dance, boogie bounce and a concert hall opus.&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
&#13;
Barbary Jackson Bourne Quarto&#13;
Selection Easy. Barbary Coast sailing tunes are given an&#13;
exceptionally lyrical treatment in this Leroy Jackson arrangement. Especially good for young bands.&#13;
Full score published.&#13;
&#13;
High Plateaus Nyquist Belwin Quarto Overture Medium.&#13;
&#13;
An effective overture, colorful, interesting&#13;
&#13;
and of rare tonal beauty.&#13;
Hostrauser's&#13;
Chambers Walters Rubank Quickstep March Medium Easy. This arrangement is scored&#13;
a minor third lower than the original, and in a brighter key which makes it easier for all sections&#13;
of the band.&#13;
Huckleberry Finn Beeler&#13;
&#13;
Hansen Quarto Program Easy. A rollicking, picturesque instrumental portrait&#13;
of the Mark Twain character.&#13;
&#13;
of Praise Mozart Tolmage Staff Octavo&#13;
Concert Easy. A new adaption of Mozart's "Ave&#13;
Verum". May be used together with Staff Choral No. 207 for combined Band and Mixed Chorus.&#13;
&#13;
Hymn&#13;
&#13;
Icarus Johnson Fischer Quarto Tone&#13;
Poem&#13;
Easy. Just plain wonderful&#13;
Full sounding even with&#13;
small instrumentation. Skillfully constructed with nice contrast, interesting harmony, and very nice&#13;
melody. Full score available. Playing time 4 minutes.&#13;
In A Clock Store Vitto Fischer Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Descriptive Easy. Perfect program piece. All clocks in the&#13;
store come alive for listener as well as player. You will program it again and again if you give&#13;
it a chance to be heard. Don't miss "In A Clock Store". It's easy and fun to play.&#13;
&#13;
In The Mood Razaf Garland Shapiro,&#13;
&#13;
Bernstein&#13;
Quickstep PopularStandard&#13;
every marching band. Charles Lee Hill arrangement.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. This is a must for&#13;
&#13;
Caprice Tschaikowsky Gass Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
Easy. The beautiful and exotic&#13;
Caprice treated for the elementary band. Good classical music excellently arranged.&#13;
&#13;
Italian&#13;
&#13;
Italian&#13;
&#13;
Jazz Rhumba&#13;
&#13;
Palange Boosey Hawkes Quarto Concert and Encore Medium. A lilting Latin-American&#13;
number in the light "pops" idiom . Introduced only a few months ago, it is well on its way to&#13;
becoming an instrumental hit, both here and abroad.&#13;
&#13;
Joanne Elizabeth&#13;
&#13;
Sperti Pro Art Quickstep March Easy.&#13;
&#13;
John Philip Sousa Centennial Fletcher AMP&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep&#13;
&#13;
A sparkling new march with a solid beat.&#13;
March Easy. A solid swinging 4/ 4 march in&#13;
&#13;
the Sousa style, for parade and concert.&#13;
John Philip Sousa Centennial March Book&#13;
arr. by Fletcher AMP&#13;
Quickstep March Book Easy. 10&#13;
original Sousa marches, including "King Cotton", "Stars &amp; Stripes Forever", "Semper Fidelis",&#13;
&#13;
"Washington Post", "El Capitan", "Liberty Bell", "Manhattan Beach", and others. Plus 4 new marches&#13;
by Sousa associates dedicated to the march king.&#13;
Trotter Perkins Werle&#13;
Mills Quarto Light Program&#13;
Easy to Medium. A very practical&#13;
program piece. Rhythmical, tuneful and interestingly arranged by Floyd Werle. Playing Time 2&#13;
minutes, 45 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Kentucky&#13;
&#13;
Kin Frangkiser&#13;
Fischer Quarto Overture Easy. Overture of marked contrasts and appealing melody.&#13;
Every section has a chance to shine. Much interest from beginning to end. Fine for festival, concert,&#13;
or C and D contests. Playing time 3 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
Kismet&#13;
&#13;
Borodin Beeler Hansen Quarto Overture Easy. A concert band adaptation of the song successes&#13;
from the Broadway musical hit "Kismet", based on themes of Borodin, featuring "Stranger&#13;
in Paradise", "Baubles, Bangles and Beads", etc.&#13;
&#13;
La Fiesta Paulson Pro Art Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Overture Easy. A gay, melodious work which carries the listener&#13;
to the sunny shores of Spain. An easy, full sounding overture.&#13;
&#13;
La Gazza Ladra (The Thievish Magpie)&#13;
&#13;
Rossini arr. by Cailliet Sam Fox&#13;
Quarto Overture Difficult. A&#13;
brilliant transcription of one of Rossini's most famous overtures. A major contribution to band&#13;
literature. Playing time 9 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
La Mascarada Walters Rubank Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Paso Doble&#13;
MediumEasy. A new and effective paso doble&#13;
that is not difficult at a fast tempo. All instruments are scored within a limited range a true&#13;
paso doble of medium easy difficulty.&#13;
&#13;
Landscape Akers Kjos Quarto&#13;
Scene Picturesque Easy. A really fine piece of music in the form of&#13;
a tone poem for the younger bands slow moving and melodic with a very effective harmonic&#13;
setting.&#13;
Page twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
The last Round-Up Billy Hill&#13;
Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Quickstep Popular Standard&#13;
Easy. A well-balanced&#13;
arrangement by Paul Yoder of this all-time standard favorite . Field formation included.&#13;
legions of Victory&#13;
Beeler Hansen Quarto&#13;
Concert&#13;
March Medium.&#13;
march by Walter Beeler, in a majestic cantabile style.&#13;
&#13;
An&#13;
&#13;
original,&#13;
&#13;
colorful&#13;
&#13;
concert&#13;
&#13;
liberty Bell, The&#13;
Sousa Walters Rubank Quickstep March Medium Easy. A new arrangement of this&#13;
Sousa favorite playable by the average class C band. Edited by Frank Simon.&#13;
little Bop Riding Hood Foreman Belwin&#13;
Octavo Novelty Very Easy. Portraying this famous nursery&#13;
rhyme in a most interesting manner with a narrator.&#13;
&#13;
Buchtel Kjos Quarto Overture Easy. Buchtel's latest original overture for young bands&#13;
Lochinvar&#13;
tuneful and interesting in all parts minimum ranges for all instruments.&#13;
Londonderry Air arr. Walters&#13;
Rubank Quarto Program Easy. A special arrangement with 20th century harmony and instrumentation. The first part is marked "rubato", giving the director a free&#13;
hand in moulding the number to fit aud ience and performers , followed by a section marked "strict&#13;
tempo". Excellent program number for Class C band.&#13;
Los Picadores Caneva&#13;
Remick Quarto Overture Easy. An original, easy overture for symphonic band.&#13;
Ernest O. Caneva is a well-established composer and this new Spanish flavored opus adds much&#13;
to his already fine reputation . Playing time 5 minutes.&#13;
love Thoughts Pryor Johnson Rubank Octavo&#13;
Solo with band&#13;
Easy. This solo for trombone and&#13;
band is the same solo part available in sheet form. Band parts are easy, about class D. Solo part,&#13;
about grade III with a straight melodic line and no variations. One of the earlier compositions of&#13;
Arthur Pryor.&#13;
lumberjack Overture Reed Hansen Quarto Overture Medium.&#13;
For the first time the rugged,&#13;
rollicking folk songs of the American Woodsman are arranged instrumentally in this impressive&#13;
overture for band&#13;
Main Street, U. S. A.&#13;
Morrissey Morris Quarto Overture Easy. A brilliant piece, descriptive of the&#13;
Main Street of any large American City, exhibiting the technique and excitement for which this&#13;
composer is so famous .&#13;
Make Way For Melody Metcalf&#13;
Fillmore Quickstep March Very Easy. Another very easy march to&#13;
take its place among the other Fillmore Library greats such as "Military Escort", etc. Horns have&#13;
melody parts practically throughout. Each section has parts of interest. Fine for general use, contest,&#13;
or festival.&#13;
The Man Who Invented Music Gillis&#13;
Mills Quarto Narratorand Band&#13;
Medium&#13;
Difficult. A fine work&#13;
for narrator and band. The narration, a natural for young people's programs yet interesting to the&#13;
adult, by Don Gillis and Claris A. Ross. The music is imaginative, vigorous and entertaining. A high&#13;
spot in any program.&#13;
Many Times Stahl, arr. Haufrecht AMP Quickstep Popular&#13;
Waltz Easy. No matter how "Many Times"&#13;
you play this beautiful ballad, you and your audience will never tire of its haunting melody.&#13;
March For Americans&#13;
Grofe Robbins Quarto Concert March Medium. An original concert march by&#13;
one of America's foremost composers with a new and stirring arrangement by David Bennett. Magnificent&#13;
finale for any concert or program. Playing time 4 minutes.&#13;
The March King L. B. Smith AMP&#13;
Quickstep 6/8 March Easy. Dedicated to John Philip Sousa. A&#13;
rousing march with a lilting trio recalling the heyday of Sousa's band.&#13;
March Nonpareil&#13;
O'Neill AMP Quickstep&#13;
part of the Sousa Centennial Series.&#13;
March On America Walters&#13;
&#13;
March Easy. Crisp alle breve march with a forward drive;&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep Easy. A very easy march utilizing America in the trio.&#13;
&#13;
A Melodic Caravan McHugh&#13;
Robbins Quarto Descriptive Medium. Five outstanding compositions that&#13;
were used in motion pictures expertly woven together by Paul Yoder to make a noteworthy addition&#13;
to the repertoire of any band. Playing time 5 minutes, 15 seconds.&#13;
Midnight Bells&#13;
Heuberger Kreisler Mesang Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
arranged for the first time in an easy band arrangement.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. The popular Viennese melody&#13;
&#13;
Mid-West Glory&#13;
Edwards Kjos Quickstep March Easy. This rousing new 6 / 8 March by the composer&#13;
of "Pride of the Mid-West", the hit of last year's Clinic, is equally Outstanding . Both are a "must"&#13;
for Concert Stage, Gridiron, or Parade for every caliber of band. You'll like it.&#13;
Mills "Pops" Concert Program Band Book&#13;
Buchtel Mills Quarto Program Easy. Distinctive stylings&#13;
of appealing favorites for the development of the young band . Fourteen selections suitable for&#13;
programs. An eight line conductor's score is provided.&#13;
Mississippi Mud&#13;
Cavanaugh Barris Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Hill arrangement. A real 'Swingeroo'.&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep Popular Standard&#13;
&#13;
Easy. Charles Lee&#13;
&#13;
Mister Peepers&#13;
Green Beeler Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
Easy. This most famous television program&#13;
theme song is a delight wherever performed. Here is an ideal program number for every grade of&#13;
band.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Mister Sandman&#13;
Yoder&#13;
by Paul Yoder.&#13;
&#13;
Morris Quickstep Novelty&#13;
&#13;
Easy. The successful hit song in a novelty scoring&#13;
&#13;
Moonlight&#13;
Beethoven, arr. by Finlayson&#13;
BooseyHawkes Octavo&#13;
Concertand Reading Easy. Finlayson&#13;
has transcribed sections of the First Movement of Beet hoven's "Moonlight Sonata" in the usual&#13;
exciting treatment identified with his arrangements.&#13;
Music Campers March&#13;
Akers Fischer Quickstep March Easy. Very easy march dedicated to the Ohio&#13;
Universiry Music Camp, Athens, Ohio, Charles Minelli, Conductor. Highly recommended for indoors,&#13;
outdoors, marching, or concert. Highest note in first clarinet is C, and first cornet G. No awkward&#13;
fingerings or technical difficulties.&#13;
Navy On Parade&#13;
Fultz Fischer Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
Stirring march, fine melody. Excellent contrast&#13;
Superior scoring. Dandy for parade, concert, contest, or festival.&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
New Yorker Hathaway Hansen&#13;
Quarto&#13;
Program Easy. A musical toast to New York town&#13;
utilizing "East Side, West Side", "The Bowery", and "Hot Time In The Old Town Tonight" written&#13;
for concert programming by elementary bands.&#13;
&#13;
The Nutmeggers&#13;
Osterling Bourne Octavo Concert March Medium.&#13;
This young composer has given&#13;
us a "new sound" in this brilliant concert march. A program "topper" for any band, large or small.&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
God&#13;
Drake Shirl Mesang&#13;
Hansen Quarto Popular Sacred Song&#13;
Easy. A choral festival number&#13;
adaptable to all choral arrangements of the song by Dr. Harry Wilson.&#13;
&#13;
The One Rose&#13;
Lyon McIntire Shapiro, Bernstein&#13;
Field formation included.&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep PopularStandard&#13;
&#13;
Easy. Paul Yoder arrangement&#13;
&#13;
Open Doors&#13;
Deniston Bourne&#13;
Quarto Overture Easy. An easy overture with a great big sound.&#13;
Descriptive writing with contrasting moods and rhythms. A wonderful sight reading number.&#13;
Original Suite, An Jacob Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Quarto Concert Difficult. This work, originally published&#13;
in 1926, but unavailable for more than ten years, has been brought back into print this year. It is&#13;
one of the first major contributions to original band literature.&#13;
Overture In Classical Style&#13;
Carter Bourne Overture Medium.Concert overture with alternating fast&#13;
and slow sections. Recommended for contest and festival use. Full score published .&#13;
Ozark Dawn&#13;
&#13;
Frangkiser Fischer Quarto Tone Poem&#13;
Easy. Rythmically and harmonically in a semi-modern&#13;
vein. Something new and different for your festival or program. Fine for class C or D&#13;
contest. Eight-line full score only. Playing time 4 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Pageant For Band&#13;
Persichetti Fischer Quarto&#13;
Selection Medium Difficult. Dr. Vincent Persichetti completed&#13;
"Pageant" in January, 1953. Commissioned fo r A. B. A. by Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman.&#13;
Opens in slow tempo with horn motive that is used in both sections of the piece. Great band music.&#13;
Pajama Game&#13;
&#13;
Reed&#13;
&#13;
Hansen&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Overture&#13;
&#13;
success including "Hey There"&#13;
&#13;
Medium.&#13;
An overture based on the Broadway musical&#13;
&#13;
"Hernando's Hideaway", "Steam Heat".&#13;
&#13;
Parade of The States Combo Band Book arr. by Bennett Shapiro, Bernstein Quickstep Collection Easy.&#13;
For parade use, rallies, sports events, etc. 12 easy arrangements of tunes related to certain&#13;
states. For example, "Beautiful Ohio" for Ohio, etc. Melody occasionally allotted to trombones-baritones.&#13;
&#13;
Pavane Faure Norman&#13;
Staff Octavo Concert&#13;
Easy. This composition by Gabriel Faure has hitherto&#13;
been unknown to the band repertoire and now becomes a welcome addition to the ever growing&#13;
catalog of fine Staff band arrangements.&#13;
Pavane Ravel Beeler Hansen&#13;
Quarto Program Easy. This delicate, sonorous Ravel composition has&#13;
been tastefully arranged in an easy manner by Walter Beeler&#13;
Pentatonic Fantasy Gardner&#13;
Staff Octavo Novelty Medium .A new original for Band by Maurice&#13;
Gardner. Clever and scintillating, yet easy for the average band to perform. Here is a highly&#13;
effective show piece designed to highlight your next band program.&#13;
Persian Carnival&#13;
Barnes Bourne Quarto Concert Piece Medium.&#13;
designed for audience appeal. Effective use of percussion&#13;
tambourine, gongs, tom toms, etc. Full score published.&#13;
&#13;
A wonderful program number&#13;
section featuring Greek cymbals,&#13;
&#13;
Pigskin Mambo&#13;
Reed Hansen Quickstep Novelty Medium. Here's the mambo dance&#13;
special, rousing band melody for assemblies, football and basketball programs.&#13;
&#13;
form&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Pilgrimage Rusch Belwin Quarto&#13;
Overture&#13;
Easy. A short potpourri type overture, simple in structure&#13;
and melodic in character, all parts are limited to their easiest and most effective range.&#13;
Pinocchio Yoder&#13;
Kjos Quarto Descriptive Overture Medium Easy. A musical portrayal of the famous&#13;
wooden puppet in Collodi's well-known story ideal program music for all bands.&#13;
Pleasant Valley Overture Hanson Ludwig Quarto&#13;
Overture Medium. By the composer of "Green&#13;
Meadows", it contains expressive melodies, subtle harmonies and comfortable ranges for all&#13;
instruments.&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Polevetsian Dance Borodin Gardner&#13;
&#13;
Staff Octavo Concert Medium Easy. Here is a complete arrangement&#13;
of the recently popularized melody by Borodin. This is in keeping w ith Staff's policy of&#13;
always maintaining good taste in its transcriptions and arrangements.&#13;
&#13;
Port Royale Frangkiser Pro Art&#13;
&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy. A new descriptive ove rture of unusual interest.&#13;
Changing tempos and colorful themes make it e xcellent for program or contest use. Class C or D.&#13;
&#13;
Prairie Lament&#13;
&#13;
Walters Rubank Quarto Program Easy. The melodic line of Prairie Lament is based&#13;
on the traditional cowboy song "Oh Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie". Walters has skillfully&#13;
woven this melody into a colorful tone picture with an underlying rhythmic background character·&#13;
istic of the great Western plains.&#13;
&#13;
Prelude &amp; Fugue In F-Minor&#13;
&#13;
Bach Moehlmann FitzSimons&#13;
Quarto Prelude &amp; Fugue Medium Easy. The&#13;
latest in the series of Bach Preludes and Fugues transcribed by Moehlmann. Truly great music and&#13;
a wonderful experience for bandsmen. A welcome relief for "non-melodic" instruments, but&#13;
sufficiently cued for solidity. Will give an almost unbelievably beautiful tone to the band.&#13;
&#13;
Prelude and Rondo from "Suite for Band" Tuthill Summy Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Suite Medium Difficult to Difficult.&#13;
First and last movements of the "Suite for Band". Other two movements available on rental from&#13;
the publisher. Winner of the Columbia University Prize in 1947. Excellent for concert. Full score&#13;
available.&#13;
&#13;
Prince Valiant Mesang Hansen&#13;
&#13;
Quickstep Overture Easy. Chivalrous knighthood in its many heroic&#13;
musical colors. An extremely easy, delightful overture for young bands.&#13;
&#13;
Reeds In Front&#13;
&#13;
Walters Rubank Quickstep&#13;
throughout this march.&#13;
&#13;
March Easy.&#13;
As the title implies, the reeds&#13;
&#13;
are featured&#13;
&#13;
arr. Hathaway Bourne Quickstep Standard Pop Tunes Easy. A&#13;
collection of fourteen "standards" given the Hathaway "swing arrangement" treatment. Includes&#13;
&#13;
Romance 'N Rhythm (Band Book)&#13;
&#13;
such favorites as "All Of Me", "I'll Get By", "I Never Knew", "San Antonio Rose", "Moon Over&#13;
&#13;
Miami", "I'm Confessin'", "Me and My Shadow", etc.&#13;
The Rompin' Stomp&#13;
&#13;
Gillis Mills Quarto Novelty Medium&#13;
Difficult. A smart Don Gillis rhythm composition&#13;
Interesting brass figures. Results will justify the work put in preparation.&#13;
&#13;
Rosary, The Nevin Walters Rubank Quarto Program Very&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A new arrangement that adds a&#13;
surprising freshness to this familiar title. A popular selection, excellent for teaching the band&#13;
phrasing and balance between sections. Very easy, playable by second and third semester students.&#13;
&#13;
Scotch Folk Song Suite&#13;
&#13;
Davis Ludwig Quarto Suite Medium. A colorful scoring of three charming&#13;
Scotch folk songs "Auld Rob Morris", "Loch Lomond", and "John Anderson" (march with Bagpipe&#13;
effects). Excellent for Festivals, Contest or Concert use. Entertaining as well as good music.&#13;
&#13;
Shine Mack Brown Dabney Shapiro,&#13;
Bernstein Quickstep Fox&#13;
Charles Lee Hill is a must! Lively, bouncy fox trot tempo.&#13;
&#13;
Trot Easy.&#13;
&#13;
This new arrangement by&#13;
&#13;
Short'nin' Bread Special&#13;
&#13;
Hathaway Bourne Octavo Novelty Easy. An exciting novelty based on the&#13;
traditional tune. Features band using "hand clap", singing players and soloists who can "ham it&#13;
up". Optional choruses of lyrics easily memorized.&#13;
&#13;
Short Piece For Band Helbig&#13;
&#13;
Bourne Quarto Concert Medium. A 2 1/2 minute opener-very flashy&#13;
arrangement using high reeds and brasses. Modern harmonies and exciting rhythms. Full score&#13;
published.&#13;
&#13;
Side By Side Woods&#13;
&#13;
Shapiro, Bernstein Quickstep Popular Standard Easy. A Charles Lee Hill arrangement&#13;
of this old favorite. A welcome addition to your library.&#13;
&#13;
Silver Mountain Barnard&#13;
&#13;
Pro Art&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy. This fine imaginative overture will capture&#13;
and hold the interest of band and audience. Well-balanced instrumentally and rhythmically, yet easy&#13;
to perform.&#13;
&#13;
Sir Lancelot&#13;
&#13;
Ryberg Witmark&#13;
Quarto Overture Medium Difficult. The renowned knight errant commemorated fittingly in this well-knit overture. Jean B. Ryberg, clarinetist with the Kansas City Civic&#13;
Orchestra, has effectively caught the feeling of knighthood. A thoroughly practical and playable&#13;
concert number. Playing time 8 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Skip To My Lou&#13;
&#13;
Herfurth Bourne Octavo Folk Very&#13;
Easy. This arrangement was designed for junior&#13;
bands. Very easy, yet gives a very full sound. Published with seven-line conductor score.&#13;
&#13;
Sky Jockey Edwards Barnhouse Quickstep March Medium.&#13;
&#13;
A sparkling new march by the composer&#13;
of "Pride of the Marines". It has fine melody throughout, enhanced by nice work for the heavy&#13;
instruments, together with good marching rhythm. Good enough for the best, yet playable by the&#13;
average band.&#13;
&#13;
Slavonic Festival Scarmolin&#13;
&#13;
Belwin Quarto Overture Medium. This overture is designed to paint a&#13;
musical picture of peasant life in the Balkans. All the happy, carefree moods of its people are&#13;
herein portrayed musically.&#13;
&#13;
Sleepers, Awake Bach Tolmage Staff Octavo Concert Medium&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A beautiful transcription&#13;
the organ chorale prelude by John Sebastian Bach. Arranged by Gerald Tolmage.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Page twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Snow Mountain&#13;
Akers Kjos Quarto Overture Easy.&#13;
An easy overture for the younger bands in the&#13;
distinctive style of Howard Akers. Clean-cut writing for all sections with effective dynamic contrast.&#13;
Soliloquy For Trumpet (or Cornet)&#13;
Morrissey Morris Quarto Solo Easy. A brilliant, stylized solo for&#13;
Trumpet or Cornet, by the very popular American composer.&#13;
Sousa Band Fraternal March&#13;
Buys AMP Quickstep March&#13;
Easy.&#13;
Commemorating the 100th Anniversary&#13;
of John Philip Sousa's birth, this snappy march carries on the Sousa tradition.&#13;
Southern Four&#13;
&#13;
Palange Presser Octavo Novelty&#13;
Medium.&#13;
Features Dixieland Combo with band accompaniment&#13;
(clarinet, tenor sax, trumpet and trombone). Splendid novelty, accompaniment is rather&#13;
easy but it requires 4 good "Dixielanders" and lots of rehearsal for finished performance.&#13;
&#13;
Southern Spirit&#13;
Mesang Southern (Texas)&#13;
Quickstep March Easy. Used as sight-reading&#13;
several states. Typically solid, full and playable, as are all the Mesang marches.&#13;
Southland Hovey Belwin&#13;
Octavo&#13;
as on the street or field.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
march&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Medium. fine march effective in concert program as well&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Kennedy Carr Shapiro, Bernstein Quickstep&#13;
PopularStandard&#13;
Easy. Paul Yoder&#13;
South Of The Border&#13;
arrangement. Suitable for parade or football band show. Field arrangement included.&#13;
Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Quarto Concert Medium. An&#13;
Spiritual From "Symphony 5 1/2" Gillis arr. Bainum&#13;
exciting transcription for band by one of the leading band arrangers. This was first arranged and&#13;
performed from manuscript for the American Bandmasters' Association in 1952 and, now, in printed&#13;
form, is introduced for the first time at the Midwest Band Clinic.&#13;
Stand By March&#13;
Castellucci Fischer Quarto&#13;
March Medium.&#13;
When Cecil B. DeMille was searching for&#13;
fine, sturdy march material for "The Greatest Show O n Earth", he turned to Louis Castellucci. The&#13;
result was this great march. Available on RCA Victor records. Playing time 2 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
Sweetheart of Sigma Chi Yoder&#13;
Morris Quarto PopularStandard&#13;
Easy. The all-time favorite in a very&#13;
warm arrangement by Paul Yoder, featuring a solo for trombone.&#13;
Swing with 6 and 6 Band Book arr. by Hathaway Southern (Texas) Quickstep Band Book Medium.&#13;
An excellent swing band book containing 6 well-known folk tunes and 6 best-known spirituals, all&#13;
arranged in the fine swing arrangements of Hathaway. A solid, swingy, playable book that audience&#13;
and students alike will love.&#13;
Ta-Ra-Ra Boom-Der-E Sayers Walters&#13;
Rubank Quickstep March Easy. Arranged as a march, a waltz&#13;
and finally a swing chorus; trombone glissando used .&#13;
Tarkio Frangkiser&#13;
Belwin Quarto&#13;
concert material.&#13;
&#13;
Overture Easy. A melodic and easy overture. Good contest and&#13;
&#13;
Tenderly&#13;
Herfurth Morris Quarto Popular Standard&#13;
simple, arrangement by Herfurth.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. The familiar standard in a romantic, yet&#13;
&#13;
School Song&#13;
Tennessee Tech Fight Song Yoder Kjos Quickstep&#13;
song with lyrics that can be adapted to your own school.&#13;
&#13;
Medium Easy. A solid school fight&#13;
&#13;
Moore Southern (Texas) Quickstep Fast March Easy.&#13;
A march designed for the fast&#13;
Texas Tempo&#13;
marching band. Just the march for which many a band director has been looking.&#13;
Boosey Hawkes&#13;
Octavo Encore or Curtain-raiser Medium.&#13;
Theatreland Strachey arr. Brown&#13;
glittering "curtain-raiser" by the composer of "These Foolish Things".&#13;
&#13;
Bright,&#13;
&#13;
Mills Quarto Serious Program Medium.&#13;
A transcription for&#13;
Theme and Variations Beethoven Reed&#13;
concert band of the theme from Beethoven's "String Quartet", Opus 18, No. 5 by H. Owen Reed.&#13;
A fine serious number for program or contest giving every section of the ban d a prominent part.&#13;
Themes from the "Nutcracker Suite" Tschaikowsky arr. by Johnson Belwin Quarto Selection Medium.&#13;
This se lection of the most popular themes from this ballet offers a variety of instrumental color&#13;
and effect that make use of the full resources of the concert band.&#13;
They Were Doin' The Mambo&#13;
Yoder Morris Quickstep Novelty Easy. The first sucessful mambo which&#13;
sparked the popularity of th is form , in an authentic arrangement by Paul Yoder&#13;
&#13;
32 Marchettes Walters&#13;
&#13;
Rubank Quickstep MarchFolio&#13;
Easy. An easy march folio containing the trio&#13;
of 32 standard marches arranged for sports events standard instrumentation. Two numbers are in&#13;
4/4 meter for processionals or half-time ceremonies. To facilitate the planning of maneuvers a&#13;
chart in the conductors score indicates the duration of the other 30 titles.&#13;
&#13;
Three Cardinals Davis Ludwig&#13;
Quarto Trumpet Trio (Modern) with Band or Piano Medium.&#13;
An&#13;
attractive concert program number, includes a Blues, Bounce and Dixieland Jazz Finale, within the&#13;
range of Class C or B bands but recommended for any concert band.&#13;
Three Mood Fantasy&#13;
Sperti ProArt&#13;
Octavo Overture Easy. A varied and melodious Class D overture.&#13;
Its changing moods make this number a welcome addition to any program.&#13;
Quarto Program Medium. fine arrangement by Eric Leidzen of&#13;
A&#13;
Through The Years Youmans Miller&#13;
this well-known composition, which may be played with or without a cornet or trombone solo.&#13;
Makes a fine program number. Playing time for complete arrangement 4 minutes. For solo with&#13;
optional ending 2 minutes.&#13;
Page thirty&#13;
&#13;
REVIEW OF 1954 BAND PUBLICATIONS&#13;
Thunderbird Overture&#13;
&#13;
Lang Morris Quarto Descriptive Medium. Commissioned by the Pontiac High&#13;
School Band, this work contains original themes of the Indians who originally inhabited that area.&#13;
A show piece with brilliant passages for all sections of the band .&#13;
&#13;
Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks&#13;
&#13;
Strauss Walters Rubank Quarto Tone Poem Medium Difficult. Adapted&#13;
to medium difficulty, playable by a class B band. The length has been cut to 8 minutes. This arrangement&#13;
is not a chopped-up medley, and will prove satisfactory to those familiar with the original.&#13;
Practical playing range for high school students. Full score available.&#13;
&#13;
To A Wild Rose&#13;
&#13;
MacDowell Norman Staff Octavo Concert Easy.&#13;
Edward MacDowell's immortal piano&#13;
piece in a new and beautiful arrangement. Scored to sound big and sonorous at the very first&#13;
reading.&#13;
&#13;
Toccata and Fugue In C&#13;
&#13;
Bach, arr. Plater Boosey Hawkes Quarto Concert Difficult. Continued. demand&#13;
for this concert number, long unavailable, has prompted its re-issue.&#13;
&#13;
Tomboy Duncan, arr. Richardson&#13;
in the light "pops" idiom.&#13;
&#13;
Boosey Hawkes Octavo Encore Medium.&#13;
&#13;
A fast-moving, gay number&#13;
&#13;
Trauer-Marsch, op. 103 Mendelssohn,&#13;
&#13;
arr. by Leidzen AMP Quarto Solemn March Easy. From the&#13;
Goldman Band Library. Dignified solemn march and trio with compact, full harmonies. Effective&#13;
original band music from the 19th century.&#13;
&#13;
A Tribute To Glenn Miller Gass Hansen Quarto Overture&#13;
&#13;
Medium. There will never be a greater&#13;
exponent of American dance rhythms than the late Glenn Miller. As a tribute to this master, in&#13;
his famous style, Henry Gass has arranged an Overture including "Tuxedo Junction", "Jersey&#13;
&#13;
Bounce", "American Patrol", "Little Brown Jug".&#13;
&#13;
A Tribute To Sousa Whitney Remick Quarto&#13;
Paraphrase Medium Difficult. An exciting paraphrase&#13;
based on excerpts from some of the best known works of the world renowned composer and band&#13;
leader. Playing time 6 minutes.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
Rozsa Robbins Quarto Processional Difficult. An original composition from the&#13;
motion picture "Quo Vadis" scored for band by Erik Leidzen. It is a stirring Processional featuring&#13;
brilliantly scored brass and dynamic percussion. Can also be used as a concert march. Playing time&#13;
3 minutes, 30 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
Triumphal&#13;
&#13;
Triumphant&#13;
Herfurth Bourne Octavo Processional Very Easy. Another Herfurth arrangement for&#13;
junior bands. Especially recommended for assembly programs and graduation exercises . Seven-line&#13;
score.&#13;
&#13;
Trompette et Tambour (Opus 22) Bizet Barnes&#13;
&#13;
Bourne Quarto Concert Medium.A delightful work&#13;
by Bizet skillfully arranged by Barnes. Effective use of woodwinds and lower brasses. Full score&#13;
published.&#13;
&#13;
Truax Field Mesang&#13;
&#13;
Southern (Texas) Quickstep March Easy. The last in a series of Mesang marches&#13;
we will publish. Just as good as all the others we publish.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Tsar's Bride&#13;
Rimsky-Korsakov, arr. by Harding&#13;
Kjos Quarto Overture Medium Difficult. This&#13;
brilliant transcription of magnificent music for band has just been completed by Dr. A. A. Harding&#13;
as the most recent addition to his series of classics for the concert band.&#13;
&#13;
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star Piket AMP Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Novelty Medium. Variations for concert band on&#13;
everybody's favorite nursery tune, spiced with pungent modern harmony. Brass, woodwinds and&#13;
percussion have ample opportunity to demonstrate their sonorities.&#13;
(Bach &amp; Beethoven) Erickson Bourne&#13;
Quarto Classical Marches Easy. Two&#13;
classical marches never before published for band. "Entree" by J. S. Bach and Beethoven's "Opus&#13;
45". Excellent for contest. Full score published.&#13;
&#13;
Two Marches For Band&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Typewriter&#13;
Anderson Werle Mills Quarto Novelty Medium. Leroy Anderson's popular novelty&#13;
transcribed for band by Floyd Werle. A real typewriter part is included but alternative is provided .&#13;
An unusual and appealing number.&#13;
&#13;
Velvet Glove Spina Lang Morris&#13;
&#13;
Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Novelty Easy. An enticing novelty featuring the cornets and&#13;
&#13;
the clarinets.&#13;
Viennese Melody&#13;
&#13;
Gaertner Kreisler Reed Hansen Quarto Program&#13;
Vienna, based on the famous Gaertner-Kreisler melody.&#13;
&#13;
Easy. A nostalgic picture of Old&#13;
&#13;
West Point Suite Milhaud AMP Quarto&#13;
&#13;
Concert&#13;
Suite Medium Difficult. Concert suite in 3 movements:&#13;
lntroduclion, Recitative, Fanfare. Commissioned for sesquicentennial celebration at West Point.&#13;
Vigorous contemporary style with brilliant fortissimo finale, by one of the world's foremost&#13;
composers.&#13;
&#13;
Whistling Boy Davis Kjos&#13;
&#13;
setting&#13;
&#13;
Quarto Concert Novelty Medium Easy. An original novelty in a modern&#13;
catchy theme for whistling contrasting with full sounds in all sections.&#13;
&#13;
by Yoder Feist&#13;
Quickstep College Medley Medium. Four famous Yale College&#13;
songs arranged in a fine medley by Paul Yoder. Good for Football Games, Basketball Games, Pep&#13;
Rallies, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Yale Medley arr.&#13;
&#13;
Page thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
TO THE MID-WEST BAND CLINIC&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Lyons&#13;
&#13;
Band&#13;
&#13;
Instrument Company's offices,&#13;
&#13;
showrooms and repair department are only a three&#13;
minute walk from the Sherman Hotel.&#13;
Open house will be held in our service and repair&#13;
department all during the Clinic sessions.&#13;
We hope you will come over and meet the experts&#13;
that serve you, whether it is to present some problem&#13;
that we can help you solve or merely to say "hello".&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
WEST&#13;
&#13;
RANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
BAND INSTRUMENT CO.&#13;
&#13;
223&#13;
&#13;
WEST&#13;
&#13;
LAKE&#13;
&#13;
STREET&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
6,&#13;
&#13;
ILLINOIS&#13;
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                <text>A booklet of the 8th Annual Midwest National Band Clinic. This booklet contains a schedule of the event as it spans across several days, information about participating bands and their directors, as well as programs for each band's clinic concert. There is also a section reviewing band music publications from that year.</text>
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                <text>Event Schedule......................................Page 1&#13;
Contributors............................................Page 2&#13;
Organizations.........................................Page 3&#13;
Clinicians..................................................Page 4&#13;
Band Information and Programs... Page 6&#13;
Review of 1954 Band Publications.Page 22&#13;
Lyons Band Instrument Company.Page 32</text>
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                    <text>�Iowa Bandmasters Association&#13;
Twenty-seventh Annual&#13;
&#13;
STATE CONVENTION PROGRAM&#13;
May 21-22-23, 1954&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel - Convention Headquarters&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
R. E.&#13;
(Bob) L owry&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer Alonzo&#13;
Des Moin es&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
P aul Behm&#13;
Mason&#13;
City&#13;
Arnold Bode Webster City&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENTS&#13;
L awrence Cook Adel&#13;
L elan d Cook Newton&#13;
L eRoy Dick Atlantic&#13;
&#13;
Cl a ir e Faust Garden&#13;
G rove&#13;
Bill Stusak Anamosa&#13;
&#13;
RESOL UTI ONS COMMITTEE Rapids , Roy Schwab&#13;
Maquoketa, a le Caris Sioux&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
R. Cedric Anderson Cedar&#13;
&#13;
L each&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bandmasters Magazine Editor F rank Waggoner Merrill&#13;
&#13;
FRIDAY - MAY 21&#13;
8:00 a.m.&#13;
IBA&#13;
&#13;
GOLF TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Dale Caris in charge.&#13;
&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
REGISTRATION&#13;
&#13;
Martin&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
3:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Mezzanine&#13;
&#13;
Meet Your Exhibitors -&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS BAND SESSION&#13;
Harold&#13;
1.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
&#13;
Country Club&#13;
&#13;
300 So. St. Aubin Street&#13;
&#13;
Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Walters, Guest Conductor Bob Brooks, C hairman.&#13;
Reading of new m aterials.&#13;
"New Sounds for Brasses."&#13;
D emonstration&#13;
Program p reparation.&#13;
&#13;
BRIDGING THE GAP"&#13;
&#13;
Corn&#13;
&#13;
Room&#13;
&#13;
E. B. Shlim in charge LeRoy Dick, Ch airman.&#13;
D emonstration with Pre-Band Instruments.&#13;
&#13;
6:30 p.m.&#13;
SPENCER H. S. MARCHING BAND PRESENTATION In front of Convention Hea dquarters&#13;
Directed by Robert Dean.&#13;
&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
ALL-CITY&#13;
MUSIC FESTIVAL CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
Municipal&#13;
&#13;
Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Grades&#13;
Junior and Senior High Sch ools Hal Buntley Music Supervisor;&#13;
With the Sioux City Symphony Orchestra&#13;
L eo Kucinski, Conductor&#13;
&#13;
10:00 p.m.&#13;
"PAST-PRES."&#13;
&#13;
STAG PARTY&#13;
Everyone invited&#13;
&#13;
Moose Club&#13;
&#13;
if you're a Man.&#13;
&#13;
Your Hosts -&#13;
&#13;
Our Exhibitors&#13;
&#13;
513 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
�SATURDAY 8:00 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
MAY 22&#13;
&#13;
SIOUXLAND "ALL-STAR" BAND REHEARSAL&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould, Guest Director Leo Kucinski, Chairman.&#13;
"Highlights and Background" on the&#13;
new Columbia Concert Band and the&#13;
"Strike Up the Band" record album.&#13;
&#13;
9:00 a.m.&#13;
REGISTRATION&#13;
10:00 a.m.&#13;
"NEW&#13;
&#13;
CONTINUED-EXHIBITOR'S OPENING&#13;
&#13;
Mezzanine&#13;
&#13;
HORIZONS IN MUSICAL EDUCATION PROCEDURES"&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
David Gornston in charge-Grayson Sloan, Chairman.&#13;
&#13;
11 :00 a.m.&#13;
"THE&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
TRUMPET TRIANGLE"&#13;
Vincent Bach&#13;
From the Manufacturer's standpoint.&#13;
Daniel Tetzlaff&#13;
From the Player-Performer viewpoint.&#13;
From the Teacher-Bandmaster angle.&#13;
Carleton Stewart&#13;
&#13;
NOON&#13;
&#13;
Assigned Rooms&#13;
&#13;
-DIVISIONAL DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
BANDMASTERS&#13;
&#13;
BAND SESSION&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
David Bennett, Guest Conductor Bob Brooks, Chairman.&#13;
1. Reading of new materials.&#13;
2. Trombone Demonstration&#13;
Rex Peer&#13;
Assisted by the Morningside College Trombone Quartet.&#13;
3. Program preparation.&#13;
&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
BANDMASTERS&#13;
&#13;
BAND SESSION&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Continued&#13;
&#13;
Philip Lang, Guest Director&#13;
1. Reading of new materials.&#13;
2. "Modern Conceptions in Band Programming."&#13;
3. Program preparation.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
"BASICS&#13;
&#13;
ON BASSOON"&#13;
&#13;
Corn&#13;
&#13;
Room&#13;
&#13;
Hugo Fox, Clinician Kenneth Johnson , Chairman.&#13;
Former Bassoonist with the Chicago Symphony&#13;
&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
CONCERT GARNER&#13;
&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Miss Barbara Rankin, Director Harold Lorenz, Chairman.&#13;
&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUXLAND&#13;
"ALL-STAR" BAND CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
Municipal Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould, Conductor&#13;
Trumpet Soloist&#13;
Daniel Tetzlaff, Minneapolis Symphony&#13;
Broadcast KSCJ Sponsored&#13;
by Schmoller &amp; Mueller&#13;
&#13;
10:00 p.m.&#13;
FREE&#13;
&#13;
MOVIES&#13;
&#13;
Corn Room&#13;
&#13;
Frank Piersol in charge.&#13;
1. ISC Band "Kinescope" Concert,&#13;
Sigurd Rascher, Saxophone Soloist.&#13;
2. ISC Marching Band in sound and color&#13;
3. "Band Technique" Films.&#13;
Courtesy of "Uniforms by Ostwald."&#13;
The Moose Club Welcomes You&#13;
513 Nebraska Street&#13;
Honoring IBA Badges for the Convention Dates.&#13;
&#13;
�SUNDAY -&#13;
&#13;
MAY 23&#13;
Hotel Mezzanine&#13;
&#13;
8:30 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
REGISTRATIONCONTINUED&#13;
&#13;
9:00 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
BREAKFAST SESSION&#13;
&#13;
9:45 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
DANCE&#13;
BAND DEMONSTRATION&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Room, Martin Hotel&#13;
Sioux City Room&#13;
&#13;
Ray DeVilbiss in charge.&#13;
Sioux City, East.&#13;
1. Junior High Combo&#13;
2. High School Unit&#13;
Sioux City, Central.&#13;
3. College Finale&#13;
"Sinfonians" of Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
10:30 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS MEETING&#13;
&#13;
Corn Room&#13;
&#13;
Your Last Opportunity -&#13;
&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Visit the Exhibits&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS BAND SESSION&#13;
Paul Yoder, Guest Director Bob Brooks, Chairman.&#13;
1. Reading of new m aterials.&#13;
2. "Voicing the Marching&#13;
Band."&#13;
3. Program preparation.&#13;
&#13;
3:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER'S&#13;
PANEL DISCUSSION&#13;
&#13;
Corn&#13;
&#13;
Room&#13;
&#13;
David Gornston, Moderator&#13;
Morton Gould Philip Lang&#13;
David Bennett&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
Howard Akers&#13;
H arold W alters&#13;
- and others -&#13;
&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
ANNUAL&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS BANQUET&#13;
( Special Invitation to Your Ladies )&#13;
&#13;
Paul Yoder, Toastmaster&#13;
Guest Speaker&#13;
Morton Gould .&#13;
Music Phi Mu Alpha Music Fraternity&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Lee Hickle and Guests.&#13;
&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Municipal Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERSBAND CONCERT&#13;
Guest Conductors&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
Philip Lang&#13;
H arold Walters&#13;
D avid Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
&#13;
Don Stone. KSCJ&#13;
&#13;
GRAND FINALE -&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>Iowa Bandmasters Association&#13;
Twenty-seventh Annual&#13;
&#13;
STATE CONVENTION PROGRAM&#13;
May 21-22-23, 1954&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel - Convention Headquarters&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
R. E.&#13;
(Bob) L owry&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer Alonzo&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Paul Behm&#13;
Mason&#13;
City&#13;
Arnold Bode Webster City&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENTS&#13;
Lawrence Cook Adel&#13;
Leland Cook Newton&#13;
LeRoy Dick Atlantic&#13;
&#13;
Claire Faust Garden&#13;
Grove&#13;
Bill Stusak Anamosa&#13;
&#13;
RESOLUTIONS COMMITTEE Rapids, Roy Schwab&#13;
Maquoketa, Dale Caris Sioux&#13;
&#13;
R. Cedric Anderson Cedar&#13;
&#13;
Leach&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bandmasters Magazine Editor Frank Waggoner Merrill&#13;
&#13;
FRIDAY - MAY 21&#13;
8:00 a.m.&#13;
IBA&#13;
&#13;
GOLF TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Dale Caris in charge.&#13;
&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
REGISTRATION&#13;
&#13;
Martin&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
3:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Mezzanine&#13;
&#13;
Meet Your Exhibitors -&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS BAND SESSION&#13;
Harold&#13;
1.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
&#13;
Country Club&#13;
&#13;
300 So. St. Aubin Street&#13;
&#13;
Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Walters, Guest Conductor Bob Brooks, Chairman.&#13;
Reading of new materials.&#13;
"New Sounds for Brasses."&#13;
Demonstration&#13;
Program preparation.&#13;
&#13;
BRIDGING THE GAP"&#13;
&#13;
Corn&#13;
&#13;
Room&#13;
&#13;
E. B. Shlim in charge LeRoy Dick, Chairman.&#13;
Demonstration with Pre-Band Instruments.&#13;
&#13;
6:30 p.m.&#13;
SPENCER H. S. MARCHING BAND PRESENTATION In front of Convention Headquarters&#13;
Directed by Robert Dean.&#13;
&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
ALL-CITY&#13;
MUSIC FESTIVAL CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
Municipal&#13;
&#13;
Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Grades&#13;
Junior and Senior High Schools Hal Buntley Music Supervisor;&#13;
With the Sioux City Symphony Orchestra&#13;
Leo Kucinski, Conductor&#13;
&#13;
10:00 p.m.&#13;
"PAST-PRES."&#13;
&#13;
STAG PARTY&#13;
Everyone invited&#13;
&#13;
Moose Club&#13;
&#13;
if you're a Man.&#13;
&#13;
Your Hosts -&#13;
&#13;
Our Exhibitors&#13;
&#13;
513 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY 8:00 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
MAY 22&#13;
&#13;
SIOUXLAND "ALL-STAR" BAND REHEARSAL&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould, Guest Director Leo Kucinski, Chairman.&#13;
"Highlights and Background" on the&#13;
new Columbia Concert Band and the&#13;
"Strike Up the Band" record album.&#13;
&#13;
9:00 a.m.&#13;
REGISTRATION&#13;
10:00 a.m.&#13;
"NEW&#13;
&#13;
CONTINUED-EXHIBITOR'S OPENING&#13;
&#13;
Mezzanine&#13;
&#13;
HORIZONS IN MUSICAL EDUCATION PROCEDURES"&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
David Gornston in charge-Grayson Sloan, Chairman.&#13;
&#13;
11 :00 a.m.&#13;
"THE&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
TRUMPET TRIANGLE"&#13;
Vincent Bach&#13;
From the Manufacturer's standpoint.&#13;
Daniel Tetzlaff&#13;
From the Player-Performer viewpoint.&#13;
From the Teacher-Bandmaster angle.&#13;
Carleton Stewart&#13;
&#13;
NOON&#13;
&#13;
Assigned Rooms&#13;
&#13;
-DIVISIONAL DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
BANDMASTERS&#13;
&#13;
BAND SESSION&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
David Bennett, Guest Conductor Bob Brooks, Chairman.&#13;
1. Reading of new materials.&#13;
2. Trombone Demonstration&#13;
Rex Peer&#13;
Assisted by the Morningside College Trombone Quartet.&#13;
3. Program preparation.&#13;
&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
BANDMASTERS&#13;
&#13;
BAND SESSION&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Continued&#13;
&#13;
Philip Lang, Guest Director&#13;
1. Reading of new materials.&#13;
2. "Modern Conceptions in Band Programming."&#13;
3. Program preparation.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
"BASICS&#13;
&#13;
ON BASSOON"&#13;
&#13;
Corn&#13;
&#13;
Room&#13;
&#13;
Hugo Fox, Clinician Kenneth Johnson , Chairman.&#13;
Former Bassoonist with the Chicago Symphony&#13;
&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
CONCERT GARNER&#13;
&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL BAND&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
Miss Barbara Rankin, Director Harold Lorenz, Chairman.&#13;
&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUXLAND&#13;
"ALL-STAR" BAND CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
Municipal Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
Morton Gould, Conductor&#13;
Trumpet Soloist&#13;
Daniel Tetzlaff, Minneapolis Symphony&#13;
Broadcast KSCJ Sponsored&#13;
by Schmoller &amp; Mueller&#13;
&#13;
10:00 p.m.&#13;
FREE&#13;
&#13;
MOVIES&#13;
&#13;
Corn Room&#13;
&#13;
Frank Piersol in charge.&#13;
1. ISC Band "Kinescope" Concert,&#13;
Sigurd Rascher, Saxophone Soloist.&#13;
2. ISC Marching Band in sound and color&#13;
3. "Band Technique" Films.&#13;
Courtesy of "Uniforms by Ostwald."&#13;
The Moose Club Welcomes You&#13;
513 Nebraska Street&#13;
Honoring IBA Badges for the Convention Dates.&#13;
&#13;
SUNDAY -&#13;
&#13;
MAY 23&#13;
Hotel Mezzanine&#13;
&#13;
8:30 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
REGISTRATION CONTINUED&#13;
&#13;
9:00 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
BREAKFAST SESSION&#13;
&#13;
9:45 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
DANCE&#13;
BAND DEMONSTRATION&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Room, Martin Hotel&#13;
Sioux City Room&#13;
&#13;
Ray DeVilbiss in charge.&#13;
Sioux City, East.&#13;
1. Junior High Combo&#13;
2. High School Unit&#13;
Sioux City, Central.&#13;
3. College Finale&#13;
"Sinfonians" of Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
10:30 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS MEETING&#13;
&#13;
Corn Room&#13;
&#13;
Your Last Opportunity -&#13;
&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Visit the Exhibits&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS BAND SESSION&#13;
Paul Yoder, Guest Director Bob Brooks, Chairman.&#13;
1. Reading of new materials.&#13;
2. "Voicing the Marching&#13;
Band."&#13;
3. Program preparation.&#13;
&#13;
3:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
COMPOSER'S&#13;
PANEL DISCUSSION&#13;
&#13;
Corn&#13;
&#13;
Room&#13;
&#13;
David Gornston, Moderator&#13;
Morton Gould Philip Lang&#13;
David Bennett&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
Howard Akers&#13;
Harold Walters&#13;
- and others -&#13;
&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
ANNUAL&#13;
&#13;
Ballroom&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERS BANQUET&#13;
( Special Invitation to Your Ladies )&#13;
&#13;
Paul Yoder, Toastmaster&#13;
Guest Speaker&#13;
Morton Gould .&#13;
Music Phi Mu Alpha Music Fraternity&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Lee Hickle and Guests.&#13;
&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Municipal Auditorium&#13;
&#13;
BANDMASTERSBAND CONCERT&#13;
Guest Conductors&#13;
Paul Yoder&#13;
Philip Lang&#13;
H arold Walters&#13;
D avid Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Master of Ceremonies&#13;
&#13;
Don Stone. KSCJ&#13;
&#13;
GRAND FINALE -&#13;
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                    <text>THE MORNINGSIDER is the official alumni publication of Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
December 1961&#13;
&#13;
�THE&#13;
PRESI DENT'S&#13;
PEN&#13;
&#13;
At the fall meeting of the Board of&#13;
Trustees of Morningside College I persented a program on Wills and E states.&#13;
The Board adopted this program with the&#13;
thought that it should be immediately put&#13;
into operation. I want to explain this program briefly to you and ask you for your&#13;
support and assistance.&#13;
There will be quarterly mailings to a&#13;
select group of at least 1,000 individuals&#13;
which we hope will motivate them to ask&#13;
for additional information which will tell&#13;
them how they can retain the use of their&#13;
money and yet save tax dollars by including&#13;
Morningside College in their estate planning.&#13;
Despite the constantly increasing number of wealthy individuals, relatively few&#13;
are being motivated to give to tax exempt&#13;
organizations. Apparently people of wealth&#13;
don't realize how little it costs to make such&#13;
bequest s. In 1959 slightly more than 5%&#13;
of t he gross estates were bequeathed to all&#13;
tax exempt organizations in the United&#13;
States,&#13;
which shows an evidence of neglect&#13;
on the part of people in leaving their&#13;
estates to needy causes, such as the church&#13;
and college. We must see that the peop, e&#13;
!&#13;
are inf,o rmed.&#13;
What I am asking you to do at this time&#13;
is furnish us with names and information&#13;
about individuals in your community, possibly members of your church or others in&#13;
the community that would be interested in&#13;
Morningside College. They should be of&#13;
sufficient means that they would to able to&#13;
leave enough income to take care of their&#13;
family and other local interest s but still be&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
capable of giving to Morningside through&#13;
a Will.&#13;
Twenty years from now, the only churchrelated non-tax-supported&#13;
college still&#13;
carrying on a respectable educational program, will be those institutions which are&#13;
building significant endowment programs&#13;
today.&#13;
J. Richard Palmer&#13;
&#13;
ON THE COVER&#13;
Groundbreaking&#13;
&#13;
exercises&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
new Student Center were held Friday,&#13;
October 20, of Homecoming&#13;
&#13;
weekend.&#13;
&#13;
Shown holding the spade of upturned&#13;
soil from the site, is President Emeritus&#13;
&#13;
Earl A. Roadman. Others from left to&#13;
·right are President J. Richard Palmer,&#13;
Al Buckingham, Director of Public Relations and Athletic Director, David W .&#13;
Stewart, President of the Board of&#13;
Trustees, Steve Pohlman, president of&#13;
the student body, Dave Otto, student&#13;
council member,&#13;
&#13;
Alan&#13;
&#13;
Stone, student&#13;
&#13;
council member, and Harold Poppen,&#13;
admission's counselor.&#13;
&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDER&#13;
A. W. Buck ingham ___ __ Public R elations&#13;
Louis Croston ---- - -------- --- ___ Editor&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Sioux City, Iowa as&#13;
Second Class Matter under Act of Congress, August&#13;
24. 1912 . Published four times a year in September.&#13;
Decem ber, March and Ju ne by Morningside college.&#13;
Sioux City 6, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�THE&#13;
VOL. XX&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDER&#13;
December, 1961&#13;
&#13;
N o. 2&#13;
&#13;
From left to right: Diane Bushyager, Elaine Arveson, Kay Pech, Queen Nancy Drommer,&#13;
Judy Marsh, Jean Long, Sonja Goetsch.&#13;
&#13;
BEAUTY AND CHARM&#13;
REIGN AT HOMECOMING&#13;
Miss Nancy Drommer of Pomeroy, Iowa&#13;
was elected the 1961 Homecoming Queen.&#13;
the coronation took place in Alle Gymnasium at the annual homecoming dance Friday evening, October 20th. The Queen's&#13;
attendants were Elaine Arveson, Hornick&#13;
Iowa; Sonja Goetsch, Lu Verne, Iowa; Jean&#13;
Long, Fort Dodge, Iowa; Kay Pech, LeMars,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa; and J udy Marsh and Diane Bushyager of Sioux City.&#13;
Nancy is a senior and majoring in m usic&#13;
education. She is a member of the student&#13;
council, band, choir, Mu Phi E psilon music&#13;
sorority, and has served as president of the&#13;
women's dormitory.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION&#13;
Officers and Board&#13;
Homecoming 1961 to Homecoming 1962&#13;
Alumni Officers&#13;
Presi dent ___________ Dean Harrington&#13;
Pres. Elect ____________ James Fowler&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Mi ldred Wikert Wallman '4 1&#13;
La Donna Rispalje Preston '53&#13;
Secretary ___ _____ ___ Ruth Elliott Jones&#13;
Treasurer _____ __________ _ Ira Gwinn&#13;
&#13;
'51&#13;
'53&#13;
&#13;
'46&#13;
'22&#13;
&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
Don Stone '5 1&#13;
Don Kelsey '49&#13;
Don Severeide '42&#13;
C. C. (Cap) Maddison '28&#13;
Mrs. R. H. M cBride '17&#13;
Robert Eidsmoe '52&#13;
Chet Josl in '51&#13;
Alumni Trustee&#13;
Hon ie Rogers '25&#13;
Virgil Gerkin '21&#13;
Lowell Crippen '30&#13;
Richard King '41&#13;
Donald Preston ' 51&#13;
&#13;
From left to right, new officers present&#13;
for a picture were Jim Fowler, Don Preston,&#13;
Mildred Wikert Wallman , LaDonna Rispalje&#13;
Preston, and Dean Harrington .&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Don Stone ('50), 1960-61 president of the&#13;
Morningside Alumni Association .r eceives a&#13;
plaque for his year of fine service, from the&#13;
new President Dean Harrington '51. Dean&#13;
is Terminal manager of the Premier Trucking&#13;
Service Company and Mrs. Harrington is the&#13;
former Chris Booz '49.&#13;
The new president assumed his duties for&#13;
the year 1961-62 after being installed at&#13;
the annual Homecoming dinner.&#13;
&#13;
Jean Woodford Stone, ('45), Don Stone,&#13;
('51 ), Chris Booz Harrington, Dean Harrington '51, LaDonna Rispalje Preston '53, Don&#13;
Preston '51.&#13;
&#13;
�"M" CLUB&#13;
The food line at the "M" Club lunc,heon&#13;
gets rapt attention from the "first in line".&#13;
Recognizable in the photo are Merle Shafenberg '21 of Hinton, Dwight Hauff '28, of&#13;
Sioux City, Bud Brockm. n, Coach, Max&#13;
a&#13;
Hughes . . 28 and Darrell Murray '59.&#13;
&#13;
We don't remember if in this picture&#13;
Nathan "Rabbit" Goldberg '30 is bowing,&#13;
getting up, or in the process of sitting down.&#13;
At any rate Harold "Buck" Bollman '35 is&#13;
amused. Bob Hansen is displaying the "Obe"&#13;
Wenig Memo·rial Plaque. This plaque, in&#13;
memory of Obe Wenig, all time great athlete&#13;
and former coach at Morningside, has spaces&#13;
for the next twenty years for the names of&#13;
t,hose men chosen by t.he coaching staff as&#13;
the most improved basketball player each&#13;
year. Bob Hansen '51 was the "M" Club&#13;
luncheon chairman.&#13;
&#13;
Russell "Pete" Knudsen '27, and Charlie&#13;
Bach '27 were recipients of "M" Club blankets at the luncheon. Knudsen and Bach&#13;
were star .h alf-backs for Morningside. Knudsen first presented a blanket to Bach and&#13;
after accepting, Bach presented one to Knudsen.&#13;
Knudsen is Superintendent of the Natural&#13;
Gas Pipe Line Plant at Dakota City, Nebraska;&#13;
and Bach is manager for Sears and Co. of the&#13;
Minneapolis area stores.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
�HOMECOMING 1961&#13;
Homecoming 1961 was a colorful event&#13;
on the campus O ctober 20th a nd 21st. Events&#13;
started Thursday evening with th e traditional&#13;
bon fire on Bass Field, c rowning of the freshman queen a nd a pep rally.&#13;
Ground breaking ceremonies for the new&#13;
Student Center were h eld Friday morning at&#13;
the convocation hour, followed by the annua l&#13;
alumni workshop. ( see page 8 )&#13;
Friday evening following the alumni workshop, a dinner was h eld at Grace Church,&#13;
open to a lumni and faculty. The speaker was&#13;
R a lph Beerman ( ' 35 ) of D akota City, Nebraska republican representative in the U nited&#13;
States Congress.&#13;
The annual Homecoming dance a nd coronation of Miss Morningside, 1961 was he ld&#13;
Friday evening in Allee Gymnasium. Darrel&#13;
Warner a nd his orchestra provided the music.&#13;
Nancy Drommer of Pomeroy, I owa was&#13;
crowned Queen by Presiden t P alme r. Morningside's tradition is tha t the identity of the&#13;
Queen be kept secret until the actua l moment&#13;
of the coronation. Male students only are allowed to vote.&#13;
Saturday morning's feature was the p a rade.&#13;
As is now the custom, it formed for a p erformance at the east end of Morningside Avenue, proceeds to C ecelia P ark and reassembles in downtown Sioux Ci ty to parad e th ere.&#13;
At noon on Sa turday the "M" C lub luncheon was held in Allee Gymnasium. This is&#13;
a booster organization and membership is not&#13;
limited to letter winners,. H a rold Bollman,&#13;
president of the " M " C lub presided .&#13;
&#13;
Miss Sherry Read, of Algona, was crowned&#13;
freshman queen d uring Morningside college&#13;
Homecoming festivities .&#13;
The co ronation ceremony wa s held Thursday, October 19, at the annua l pep rally and&#13;
bon fire on Bass Field.&#13;
Saturday morning&#13;
October 21 , she was :&#13;
honored in the Homecoming parade.&#13;
Freshman queen attendants were Rita&#13;
Noehren of Harlan, Susan Buckingham, Jean&#13;
Langlas, Belle Plaine, Iowa, and Marge Freeman, Cylinder, Iowa .&#13;
Sherry is majoring in business administration at the college.&#13;
&#13;
Sorority reunion luncheons were held at&#13;
noon a t the Biltmore R esta urant. K appa Pi&#13;
Alpha (formerly Alpha Delta Pi a nd Pieria),&#13;
D elta Zet a (formerly K appa Z eta Sigma (formerly and Atheneauim) sororities participated.&#13;
The play " private Life of the Master Race",&#13;
by Brecht, was presented by the drama department in the a fternoon.&#13;
The a nnua l H omecoming dinner was held&#13;
in the d ining room of Dimm itt Hall that&#13;
evening, a t which time the Alumni Association officers for 1961-62 were installed. Don&#13;
Stone presided until h e h ad installed the new&#13;
officers.&#13;
Morningside was defeated b y State College&#13;
of Iowa (formerly Iowa State Teachers) in&#13;
the Homecoming game 43 to 27.&#13;
Coffee a nd doughnuts wer e served to a lumni and friends after the game in the dra wing&#13;
room of Dimmitt H all .&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Winn ing first p rize fo r floats in the Homecom ing parade was the one entered by&#13;
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity (formerly Alpha&#13;
Tau Delta and before that, Othonian). The&#13;
Theme of International Highlights was w ell&#13;
carried out by the float.&#13;
&#13;
�NEW&#13;
INTERNATIONAL&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
Shown at the entrance of the new international House upon the occasion of a ribbon&#13;
cutting ceremony symbolizing its opening are&#13;
several foreign students along with&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Uemura , head of the Philosophy department&#13;
and Professor Ray Nelson, coordinato r of th e&#13;
African Student Program .&#13;
&#13;
INTE RNATIONAL HOUSE OPENS&#13;
A&#13;
the&#13;
held&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
ribbon cutting ceremony, symbolizes&#13;
opening of the International House,&#13;
at two o'clock on Saturday afternoon&#13;
a part of the Homecoming program.&#13;
&#13;
The house is an integrated project and&#13;
is occupied by 36 single American and&#13;
foreign students on campus. Foreign students on campus are from Africa, Korea,&#13;
Hong Kong, India, Iran, Indonesia, Japan&#13;
Formosa,. Greece, Norway, Panama, and&#13;
V,e nezuela.&#13;
Ralph Beerman ('35 ) speaks at the annual&#13;
workshops dinner held in G race Church on&#13;
Friday night of Homecoming.&#13;
&#13;
President Palmer spoke briefly on "Vision and Reality". He pointed out that&#13;
just three short months ago the International House was merely a vision, now it&#13;
has become a reality.&#13;
Members of the Cosmopolitan Club provided music for the ceremony, and club&#13;
president Carlos Escala of Panama spoke&#13;
briefly.&#13;
President Palmer cut the ribbon and an&#13;
open house followed.&#13;
Iowa churches have&#13;
,e nthusiastically&#13;
joined in supporting the African student&#13;
program. Twenty-one churches and two&#13;
sub-districts have agreed to " adopt" in part&#13;
or wholly one or more of the African students now in the program .&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
�The Annual Alumni Workshop was held&#13;
Friday, October 20 in the lounge of the&#13;
Men's Residence Halls. The session started&#13;
at 10:00 A. M. following the ground breaking ceremonies for the New Student Center.&#13;
Don Stone ('50) president of the Alumni&#13;
Association presided. Those present heard&#13;
President Palmer, Dean Holmes, Admissions Director Bob Miller, A. W. Buckingham, and Elwood Olsen, business manager.&#13;
As much information as possible concerning Morningside and admission standards,&#13;
scholastic standards, athletics, the African&#13;
st udent program&#13;
and finances was presented. Discu ssion and questions followed&#13;
the presentations.&#13;
The aim was to inform representative&#13;
alumni from all areas concerning our college, so they can pass kn owledge along to&#13;
others; to gain the viewpoint of our alumni&#13;
on topics discussed, to outline methods by&#13;
which alumni and alumni clubs can be of&#13;
assistance to the college.&#13;
A very representative group attended&#13;
this year. Roger Burgess '50, president of&#13;
the Washington, D. C. Club was present&#13;
from the East Coast and Orin Bell '18&#13;
president of the Los Angeles Club was here&#13;
from the West Coast. Gaylord Omer was&#13;
present from Manitowec, W,i sconsin.&#13;
In attendance from Iowa were Lyle Poyzer '38 and Mrs. Poyzer of Boone. (Lyle&#13;
is president of the Ames Club), Rev.&#13;
Charles Wallace '50 and Anne Maddison&#13;
Wallace '50 from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Ed&#13;
Van Veldhuizen '48 and Helen Winter Van&#13;
Veldhuizen ('49) from the Mason City Club,&#13;
Arv Bomgaars '53 (president of the Spencer&#13;
Club), Dean Harrington '50 of Sioux Gity,&#13;
and Mary Louise Held Feikema '44 of&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Shown during a break at the planning&#13;
session are left to right, in TOP PICTURE&#13;
Elwood Olsen '38, Dr. Roadman, Bob Miller&#13;
'55.&#13;
CENTER PICTURE - Orin Bell '18 of&#13;
Orange, California and Rev. Charles Wallace&#13;
'50 of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, BOTTOM PICTURE&#13;
Mrs. Poyzer of Boone, Lyle Poyzer '30, Bob&#13;
Miller '55&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
�ARTICLE BY PROFESSOR&#13;
EIDSMOE IN ISEA MIDLAND&#13;
SCHOOLS AND JOHPER&#13;
Russell M. Eidsmoe, head of the department of education at Morningside is the&#13;
author of an article titled "The Academic&#13;
Performance of High School Athletes",&#13;
published in the November issue of Midland&#13;
Schools and in Johper (Journal of Health,&#13;
Physical Education and Recreation.)&#13;
Mr. Eidsmoe begins by saying, as quoted&#13;
from Midland Schools, "A great deal of&#13;
guessing has been going on for many years&#13;
in regard to the academic quality of athletes. It has been rather common talk&#13;
among many, including teachers, to downgrade the scholastic efforts and abilities of&#13;
those who represent various sports. It is&#13;
often an assumption that participation in&#13;
athletic endeavors is either an invitation to&#13;
a low quality of academic performance or&#13;
that it attracts individuals who do not succeed academically. The first thought is&#13;
somewhat natural since athletic participation is very time consuming with almost&#13;
endless practices and sometimes involves&#13;
considerable travel to and from contests.&#13;
.. "To gain infor mation which could be considerably more objective, a survey was&#13;
made in Iowa of the academic standing of&#13;
the twelve members of each of the boys'&#13;
basketball teams representing their high&#13;
schools in the Iowa 1960-61 Boys' Sub-State&#13;
and State Tournaments . . . . . .&#13;
. . . . Schools were asked to report the&#13;
grade average at the end of the first&#13;
semester of the 1960-61 academic year for&#13;
every player in each course he was enrolled&#13;
and also to give the grade average of the&#13;
entire class in the same course . . . . . .&#13;
. .. . Fourteen out of the total of sixteen&#13;
schools involved turned in complete reports, thereby recording the results of 168&#13;
players out of a possible 192.&#13;
A four point system was used for recording the grades turned in.; A-4.0, B-3.0,&#13;
C-2.0 and D-1.0.&#13;
The results of the survey clearly indicate&#13;
that those who are participating in basketball and capable of advancing far in such&#13;
athletic competition are distinctly above&#13;
&#13;
average in academic performance. The&#13;
grade point results for the 168 players in&#13;
all courses enrolled averaged 2.566.&#13;
The&#13;
grade point results for all the classes in&#13;
which these players were enrolled averaged&#13;
2.186 showing a very significant depar ture&#13;
in favor of the athletes."&#13;
Mr. Eidsmoe constructed a t able showing&#13;
the breakdown of grade point averages by&#13;
classes. He concludes his article with this&#13;
statement.&#13;
"The survey does show very plainly that&#13;
athletes such as basketball players who are&#13;
highly competitive in their chosen sport are&#13;
also above the average of their fellow students in academic performance, a point&#13;
which in many cultural circles has been&#13;
definitely denied or in doubt."&#13;
The article by Professor Eidsome gained&#13;
a very favorable editorial in the November&#13;
14th Des Moines Register.&#13;
&#13;
PARENTS ON CAMPUS, DEC. 2&#13;
Parents of students attending Morningside College were invited to the campus&#13;
Saturday, December 2, for a day of attending sample classes, conferring with faculty&#13;
members, and hearing administrative staff&#13;
members.&#13;
The Parents' Day program began at&#13;
9 a. m. with a welcome-registration session&#13;
with J . Clifford Holmes, dean of the college, giving a brief welcoming address.&#13;
Parents then were invited to attend abbreviated class sessions - actual classes that&#13;
are attended each week by their sons and&#13;
daughters. The course instructor conducted&#13;
the class in a manner similar to the usual&#13;
procedure. A sample chapel session in the&#13;
sanctuary of Grace Methodist church concluded the morning program.&#13;
Those parents who could remain stayed&#13;
for the evening meal at Dimmitt hall.&#13;
Stanley L. Greigg, dean of men, was&#13;
chairman of the committee planning the&#13;
Parents' day program. Serving on the committee with Dean Greigg are Dean White,&#13;
Miss Lois Grammar, A. W. Buckingham,&#13;
Robert Miller and James Miller.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
�ATHLETICS&#13;
1961 FOOTBALL&#13;
SEASON HIGHLIGHTS&#13;
The Maroon Chiefs finished the 1961&#13;
football season with 3 and 6 record. Coach&#13;
Halford, a mighty battler himself, fought&#13;
injuries to key players all season. This&#13;
was a good team, confronted with stiff&#13;
competition. The season's results are&#13;
printed below along with some very interesting statistics.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Opponents&#13;
14&#13;
Wayne State Teachers 19&#13;
6&#13;
Omaha U.&#13;
32&#13;
14&#13;
Panhandle of Okla.&#13;
7&#13;
15&#13;
North Dakota U.&#13;
49&#13;
7&#13;
North Dakota State&#13;
6&#13;
27&#13;
State College of Ia.&#13;
43&#13;
14&#13;
Augustan a&#13;
23&#13;
7&#13;
South Dakota State&#13;
55&#13;
Roger Hansen, from Central high school&#13;
in Sioux City and a junior was named an&#13;
all North Central Conference first team&#13;
end. He caught 31 passes for a total of&#13;
300 yards gained and one touchdown. He&#13;
tallied one extra point on a reception and&#13;
led the conference in pass receiving.&#13;
Chuck Corbin, a senior from Mapleton,&#13;
Iowa was chosen second team all conference&#13;
center. He has completed his college work&#13;
and was employed as physical education&#13;
instructor and assistant coach at Rock&#13;
Rapids, Iowa, starting December 4th.&#13;
Dick Schmidt, a senior from Holstein&#13;
Iowa, received Honorable Mention in the all&#13;
conference selections.&#13;
Dick played the&#13;
tackle position and was a co-captain of t he&#13;
1961 team along with Chuck Corbin.&#13;
John Tollakson, senior half-back from&#13;
Sioux Rapids, Iowa, was chosen most valuable player for the 1961 season by his&#13;
teammates. He was team high scorer with&#13;
a total of 45 points, six touchdowns and 9&#13;
of 11 points after kicks. He was 8th in&#13;
the conference in scoring totals. John also&#13;
did the punting for Morningside and had a&#13;
3.3.1 yard average on 4.2 punts, ending up&#13;
seventh in the conference.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
The team averaged 2.39.7 yards per game,&#13;
with 125.5 yards being on the ground and&#13;
1142 yards passing.&#13;
..&#13;
The Chiefs were&#13;
second for the season in passing in the&#13;
conference, averaging 117.2 yards per conference game. First place went to South&#13;
Dakota State with 138.2 yards per game.&#13;
Graham Gould, a junior from Harlan, was&#13;
the leading ground gainer on the team&#13;
with a total of 263 yards rushing in 77&#13;
carries with a 34 yard average. Leading&#13;
the team in total offense with 38 completions for 88 attempts for an average of&#13;
60.4 yards per game was John Dornan of&#13;
Harlan, Iowa, a senior. He was third in&#13;
the Conference in passing, including two&#13;
touchdown passes.&#13;
Reserve quarterback,&#13;
Leo R upke, a junior from Heelan High&#13;
School in Sioux City, threw six touchdown&#13;
passes during the season. He ended up&#13;
sixth in the conference in total passing.&#13;
No doubt the brightest highlight of the&#13;
season was the win over South Dakota University at their Homecoming at Vermillion.&#13;
This was the Chief's third straight win&#13;
over the Coyotes.&#13;
The freshman squ ad, under the tutelage&#13;
of Coach Don Protextor '49, won 2 of the&#13;
3 games they played.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
12&#13;
27&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Opponents&#13;
South Dakota&#13;
Augustana&#13;
Buena Vista B.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
34&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Rick Cowling, son&#13;
of R. M. Cowling '59,&#13;
was chosen as an end&#13;
on the Sandhill Gateway Conference football. His team (Orchard Nebraska high&#13;
school) had a 6-0 record in the conference. Mr. Cowling&#13;
teaches in the Orchard high school.&#13;
&#13;
�BASKETBALL SEASON&#13;
The basketball season is underway. By&#13;
the time the Morningsider reaches you the&#13;
Varsity and freshman teams will have&#13;
played several games.&#13;
Varsity Coach Obye in a basketball guide&#13;
produced for p·r ess, radio and television&#13;
makes these observations.&#13;
"The season ahead . . . The Morningside&#13;
College Basketball team for 1961-62 must&#13;
be classified a s "sophomore". Of the&#13;
eleven members on the varsity squad, five&#13;
were with the Maroon Chief's Freshmen&#13;
Team one year ago. If one factor has a&#13;
definite bearing on the outcome of this&#13;
season it will be how fast these sophomores&#13;
gain poise and skill to meet a stiff schedule. The loss of the team's leading offensive ace Jim Anfinson and seven&#13;
others squad members could have considerable bearing on the Chief's offensive attack.&#13;
The Chief s face an ambitious schedule. The&#13;
North Central Intercollegiate Conference is&#13;
expected to be unusually tough this year.&#13;
And the Methodists will tackle Westmar&#13;
College, Cornell College, Nebraska Wesleyan University, Huron College, Yankton&#13;
Colleg e, Omaha University and Mankato&#13;
State of Minnesota in non-conference tests&#13;
in addition to par ticipating in the Six-State&#13;
Tournament at Hastings College of Nebraska.&#13;
How Do they Look? . . . . again the&#13;
sophomore factor. Paul TeStroete, Bob&#13;
Garretson, and Rog Hansen form a nucleus&#13;
of returning star ters, but they'll need scoring efforts from Steve Pohlman, Chuck&#13;
Dickens, Walt Lill, Mike Reise and Phil&#13;
Wiggens to put consistent punch in the&#13;
offensive attack. The Chiefs are certain of&#13;
good overall speed and stamina. Chief&#13;
mentor Charles "Chuck" Obye is counting&#13;
on the early non-conference games to "jell"&#13;
the 1,961 contingent before they open North&#13;
Central Conference play on Jan. 9th.&#13;
Who are the veterans? . . . . Obye will&#13;
depend on five veterans to carry the load&#13;
this year. They are Paul TeStroete (1 letter); Bob Garretson (2 letters ) ; Roger&#13;
Hansen (1 letter); Steve Pohlman (2 lett ers); and Ron Heitritter. The only other&#13;
upper-dassman on the squad is Terry&#13;
&#13;
Wright who comes from Clarinda Junior&#13;
College."&#13;
"Chuck" Obye '46, is beginning his fifth&#13;
season at Morningside. His 1959 Maroon&#13;
Chiefs won the Iowa NAIA Championship.&#13;
This seasons' schedule is shown below.&#13;
"Bud" Brockman, a 191 graduate of&#13;
50&#13;
Westmar is in his first season as freshman&#13;
basketball coach. He reports on the freshman team, "There are some very fine ·b asketball players on the freshman team.&#13;
Although lacking in general overall height,&#13;
there are some fine shooters and rebounders who handle themselves very well".&#13;
&#13;
HEIMAN VAN DYKE&#13;
HONORED IN&#13;
HALL OF FAME&#13;
Basketball's founder at Morningside, Mr.&#13;
Heiman Van Dyke ('06) has been honored&#13;
by a life membership in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.&#13;
In August, Coach Chuck Obye wrote to&#13;
the captains of all the basketball teams&#13;
at Morningside from the first team of 190102 to the team of last year. He asked for&#13;
a contribution from each, to apply on a&#13;
life membership for Mr. Van Dyke. Any&#13;
who have not responded may still do so to&#13;
Coach Obye. A five dollar contribution entitles the donor to one free admission card&#13;
to the Hall of Fame at Springfield, Mass.,&#13;
and a copy or the original 1892 rules book.&#13;
The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall&#13;
of Fame has a ccepted a History of Basketball at Morningside College. This history&#13;
contains the names of all former coaches,&#13;
team records, captains, scoring records and&#13;
traditions of the college.&#13;
T eam Records:&#13;
Morningside&#13;
....62&#13;
Wcstmar&#13;
..69&#13;
M orningside ..................... 76&#13;
Cornell&#13;
.84&#13;
Morningside ................ 75&#13;
N eb. Wes.&#13;
. .....85&#13;
Huron ......&#13;
.... 72&#13;
M orningside... . .............89&#13;
Morningside ....................72&#13;
Yankton ···········- ··- · .49&#13;
Morningside ..................... 73&#13;
Cen t. Okla. ......... ..81&#13;
Morningside&#13;
........ 71&#13;
Betha ny, Kans. ......67&#13;
Morningside .&#13;
....82&#13;
G ut. Adol.&#13;
........... 77&#13;
Morningside ..................70&#13;
Manktao . ..................72&#13;
M o1·nings idc....&#13;
....82&#13;
Wcstma r .... ··········-·--58&#13;
Morningside...&#13;
......64&#13;
So. Da k.&#13;
...... 59&#13;
M o rningside...&#13;
..... 67&#13;
Sta te Coll. Iowa ....72&#13;
Morningside&#13;
............55&#13;
Omaha U . ....... - .......53&#13;
M orningside .... ...............73&#13;
Augustana&#13;
.... 67&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
�James Juvenal Hayes&#13;
Dies in Pennsylvania&#13;
James Juvenal Hayes, Professor of English Literature at ,M orningside for 18 years,&#13;
passed away in September.&#13;
He was living&#13;
in Glen Mills, Pennsylvania and word of&#13;
his death was received from a daughter,&#13;
Dorothy Riley.&#13;
Professor Hayes, fondly remembered by&#13;
his students as "Jimmy" Hayes came to&#13;
Morningside in the fall of 1914. He had&#13;
received his B. A. at Harvard in 1911 and&#13;
his Masters Degree from the same school&#13;
in 1912. He had done graduate work at&#13;
the University of Chicago in 1912-14, and&#13;
in the summers of 1915 - 18 - 20. He obtained his PhD at the State University of&#13;
Iowa after leaving Morningside in 1932.&#13;
Jimmy Hayes was a popular faculty&#13;
member during his tenure at Morningside.&#13;
He coached many plays and furni sh ed many&#13;
programs. He will be remembered by the&#13;
many alumni who knew him as a friend, a&#13;
scholar, and a gentleman.&#13;
Mrs. Hayes died several years ago. Many&#13;
Morningsiders will remember their three&#13;
children, Dorothy, Hester and James.&#13;
Following the fire on December 6, 1914,&#13;
which destroyed the conservatory, Professor Hayes submitted the following verse&#13;
which was printed on page 2,16 of the 1916&#13;
Sioux. (annual)&#13;
Morningside&#13;
The Crimson sun of morning&#13;
Came peeping o'er the hill&#13;
With radiance adorning&#13;
A t emple, white and still,&#13;
A fane we t hought immortal,&#13;
So solidly it stood.&#13;
Inscribed above its portal :&#13;
"Th e Beautiful, the Good"&#13;
But as the night descended,&#13;
The toilers standing by,&#13;
Saw all their labors ended&#13;
Infla mes, which leaping high ,&#13;
'Mid roars and lurid crash es,&#13;
Devoured i t where it s tood ,&#13;
And left in smoking ashes :&#13;
"The Beautiful, the good"&#13;
But as n ew s uns ascended&#13;
Behind the selfsame hill,&#13;
Behold. a vision splendid&#13;
A fa irer t emple stll&#13;
A temple ever growing,&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Expanding as it should,&#13;
To all the nations showing:&#13;
"The Beautiful, the Good"&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Participates&#13;
In Three Speech Tourneys&#13;
The Morningside speech department has&#13;
participated in three speech tournaments to&#13;
date, and in each instance have won honors&#13;
for the college.&#13;
In a tournament at Omaha University,&#13;
on November 3rd and 4th, Irene Duvall of&#13;
Sioux City was adjudged top debater in&#13;
Class "B". Jerry Va ughn was 2nd ranking&#13;
debater in Class "A", Terry Ford of Sioux&#13;
City Placed 3rd in Extempore Speaking;&#13;
the Discussion Team won 4th place. Both&#13;
the "A" division debate team and the "B"&#13;
division team won 3 and lost 5.&#13;
At South Dakota University, in a tournament held there November 17th and 18th,&#13;
Robert Gourley was given superior ratings&#13;
in discussion and debate, Jerry Vaughn won&#13;
superior ratings in interpretation and debate and Robert Gourley and Irene Duvall&#13;
were undefeated in debate. The "A" division debate team had 5 wins and 3 losses,&#13;
while the "B" division t eam had 10 wins&#13;
and 6 losses. On December 1st and 2nd,&#13;
Morning side travelled to Wayne State&#13;
Teachers for a meet and Barbara Larson&#13;
won a superior in Extempore Speaking and&#13;
Terry Ford a superior in Oratory. The "A"&#13;
division debate team had 6 win s, 4 losses.&#13;
The debate record to date in debating&#13;
against 27 teams from six states is 27 wins&#13;
and 23 losses.&#13;
The members of this year's debate squad&#13;
are: Karen Braunschweig, Irene Duvall,&#13;
Terry Ford, Robert Gourley, Robert Iverson, Barbara Larson, John Prast, Maroldine&#13;
Smith, Dean Summerbell, Clare Swanson,&#13;
William Vail, Jerr y Vaughn and Richard&#13;
Worthan.&#13;
John Braheny and Rachel Lindhar t h ave par ticipated in individuals events.&#13;
Dean Tudehope '5,5 was on the campus&#13;
this fall while v,a cationing in Sioux City.&#13;
Dean is factory representative with W. G.&#13;
Cline and Co., dealing in building and&#13;
plumbing supplies. The Tudehopes have a&#13;
daughter Donna Lynn, 15 months old.&#13;
&#13;
�Professor and Family&#13;
Study, Tour Europe&#13;
Dr. William Palmer, professor of English and head of the English department,&#13;
and his wife and four children spent the&#13;
summer in the British Isles and France.&#13;
They sailed from Montreal, Canada, on&#13;
June 12 and returned thereon August 25&#13;
after visiting England, Wales, Scotland,&#13;
and France.&#13;
Dr. Palmer spent four weeks living in a&#13;
small village in Gloucestershire and two in&#13;
London. While in England, he studied in&#13;
the libraries of Oxford and Cambridge universities and at the British Museum in&#13;
London. The Palmers visited Rugby and&#13;
Eton, famous English boys' schools.&#13;
They viewed ancient buildings including&#13;
many cathedrals, abbey churches, and&#13;
castles. They saw the ruins of Roman&#13;
cities in Western England and at St. Albans&#13;
near London. While in Scotland, Dr. Palmer lived in Old Meldrum, a small village&#13;
near Aberdeen.&#13;
He spent his time ·e xamining medieval&#13;
manuscripts at the library of King's college&#13;
at Aberdeen. Dr. Palmer gained first-hand&#13;
knowledge of the workings of the British&#13;
educational system. The Palmers found the&#13;
shopping and the educational systems in&#13;
the British Isles quite interesting.&#13;
Paris was the location of their principal&#13;
stay while they were in France. They remained in France five days and then returned to the United States.&#13;
&#13;
3100 MUSICIANS ON&#13;
CAMPUS FOR BAND DAY&#13;
The annual Morningside College Band&#13;
Day was held on October 7th with 3100&#13;
musicians from 55 high school bands participating. The bands were from Iowa,&#13;
Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE FACULTY PIANO&#13;
TEAM PLAYS AT YANKTON&#13;
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ralph Harrell, of the music&#13;
department at Morningside college, were&#13;
featured at chapel exercises at Yankton&#13;
college Thursday, October 5. They played&#13;
the piano duet Variations on an Original&#13;
Theme, Opus 35, by Schubert.&#13;
&#13;
SHAW'S "ARMS AND THE MAN"&#13;
SPONSORED BY MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The Cleveland Play House presented&#13;
George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man&#13;
on October 27th in the East High school&#13;
auditorium.&#13;
"Arms and the Man", one of Shaw's most&#13;
popular plays has had countless productions throughout the world since its London&#13;
Premier over half a century ago.&#13;
The Cleveland Play House, now in its&#13;
46th season of operation, is one of the&#13;
oldest and most outstanding professional&#13;
theaters in the United States. This is the&#13;
second season on the road for the Play&#13;
House touring repertory company, which&#13;
last season performed in 38 states.&#13;
Morningside College sponsored the Sioux&#13;
City appearance of "Arms and the Man".&#13;
&#13;
PHI MU ALPHA SINFONIA&#13;
GIVES JAZZ CONCERT&#13;
Phi Mu Altha, a national professional&#13;
music fraternity of men, dedicated to the&#13;
advancement of music and to the brotherhood among men engaged in music activities, presented their second annnual Jazz&#13;
Concert at East junior high school auditorium on November 3.&#13;
The concert, pres·e nted to a full house&#13;
and enthusiastically received, was a benefit. The proceeds are to help provide a&#13;
sound system for the new student center.&#13;
&#13;
POET EDITOR SPEAKS&#13;
AT MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Miss Denise Levertov, poetry editor of&#13;
The Nation read some of her poems at&#13;
8:30 p. m. Friday, November 3, in Klinger&#13;
forum on the Morningside college campus.&#13;
Miss Levertov, whos·e mother is Welsh,&#13;
and whose father, an Anglican clergyman,&#13;
was by birth a Russian Jew, was born in&#13;
London. She has never attended school or&#13;
college, but was educated at home.&#13;
She has published four volumes of poetry&#13;
in the last s·e ven years. Her most recent&#13;
books are With Eyes in The Back of Our&#13;
Heads and The Jacob's Ladder. Following&#13;
the program, an informal reception for&#13;
Miss Levertov was held in the faculty&#13;
lounge in Lewis Hall.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
�FOREIGN FILM SERIES&#13;
BY STUDENT COUNCIL&#13;
&#13;
KUCINSKI GUEST CONDUCTOR&#13;
AT FREDONIA, N.Y. CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
"The World of Film", composed of six&#13;
foreign films, started Saturday, October 28,&#13;
serving as a series of film entertainment&#13;
free of charge to all students of Morningside.&#13;
An English comedy, "The Captain's&#13;
Paradise" starring Alec Guiness and&#13;
Yvonne de Carlo, was the first film.&#13;
"Miracle in Milan", "Rashomow", "M",&#13;
and "Henry V" complete the program.&#13;
Each film will be shown in Klinger&#13;
forum, free to all students.&#13;
The "World of Films" comes to the college through the efforts of Dr. Howard&#13;
Levant (English), Dr. Joseph Uemura&#13;
(Philosophy) and Dave Otto, student council representative. Dr. Levant says the&#13;
films have been picked for dramatic and&#13;
technical interest, and that their purpose&#13;
was " to sophisticate the student body for&#13;
the teachers benefit."&#13;
&#13;
Leo Kucinski was g uest conductor for an&#13;
annual orchestra concert at Fredonia State&#13;
College in Fredonia, New York.&#13;
One of the featured performers in the&#13;
program was Homer Garretson '42 who is&#13;
on the faculty at Fredonia State College,&#13;
teaching strings. He received his masters&#13;
degree several years ago at Eastman School&#13;
of Music and was recently awarded his&#13;
PhD from the University of Illinois. Mrs.&#13;
Garretson (Gloria Odegaard '44) earned&#13;
her Master of Music degree at Eastman.&#13;
At least two Morningsiders were in the&#13;
audience, Jeff Fraser '54 and Alleen Linquist Fraser '53 of Rochester. They both&#13;
teach in Rochester, Jeff doing string work&#13;
and Alleen doing grade school music.&#13;
&#13;
FALL ENROLLMENT FIGURES&#13;
Fall enrollment at Morningside showed a&#13;
12 1/2&#13;
per cent gain over last year's figures.&#13;
The total equated enrollment is 1,142. The&#13;
comparable figur ue for 1960 was 1015.&#13;
The new freshman class has an enrollment of 425 students, with 270 sophomores,&#13;
217 juniors, 155 seniors, and 44 nurses who&#13;
take classes at the college. Thirty-eight&#13;
foreign students represent eleven countries.&#13;
Students on the campus come from 25 religious denominations - approximat ely 39%&#13;
are from Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
COUNSELING REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
Dr. Goodrich C. White, Chancellor of&#13;
Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia was&#13;
on the Morningside Campus in November,&#13;
under the auspices of the Board of Education of the Methodist Church and as counseling representative of the association of&#13;
American Colleges and Universities. He&#13;
conferred with the college officials at the&#13;
request of Dr. Palmer, President.&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Chemical Society Meets&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
The Iowa-Nebraska Sioux Valley section&#13;
of the American Chemical Society held its&#13;
annual meeting Saturday, November 18 at&#13;
4 p. m., in . ones Hall of Science on the&#13;
J&#13;
Morningside college campus.&#13;
Guest speaker for the event was Blaine&#13;
C. McKusick. He spoke on New Ring&#13;
Systems from Fluoroalkylacetylenes. Dr.&#13;
McKusick received his B.Ch.E. degree at&#13;
the University of Minnesota and his Ph.D.&#13;
in organic chemistry at the University of&#13;
Illinois. He has also studied at Harvard&#13;
and Zurich, Switzerland.&#13;
Dr. McKusick has been with the central&#13;
research department of the DuPont company since 1945 and is currently research&#13;
supervisor there.&#13;
H e has also been a member of the editorial board of the Organic Syntheses since&#13;
1957.&#13;
&#13;
His chief research interests include cyanocarbons,&#13;
fluorocarbons, organosulfur&#13;
chemistry, radiation chemistry, and syntheses at very high pressures.&#13;
A coffee hour was held from 3 to 4 p. m.&#13;
prior to Saturday's meeting in the faculty&#13;
lounge of Lewis hall on the Morningside&#13;
campus.&#13;
&#13;
�20TH ANNUAL SUPERINTENDENT'S&#13;
CONFERENCE HELD&#13;
Approximately two hundred Superintendents of Schools attended the annual superintendents Conference Oct. 7th sponsored&#13;
by Morningside College.&#13;
The conference, under the direction of&#13;
Professor Russell M. Eidsmoe, head of the&#13;
department of education, featured as keynote speakers Dr. Walter W. Cook, Dean&#13;
of the college of educat ion at the University of Minnesota,&#13;
and Dr. Nicholas&#13;
Nyaradi, director of the school of international studies at Bradley University, and&#13;
former Minister of Finance of Hungary.&#13;
Dr. Cook addressed the conference at the&#13;
morning session in Lillian E. Dimmitt Hall.&#13;
His topic was "The Personality of a Teacher."&#13;
Dr. Nyaradi addressed the group at the&#13;
noon luncheon at the Sheraton-Martin&#13;
hotel. His topic was "Shall We Survive".&#13;
Following the morning address by Dr.&#13;
Book, the superintendents had the opportunity of sitting in on two discussion groups.&#13;
One dealt with "The Intermediate School&#13;
Unit" and the other with "The Place of&#13;
the Schools in Relating the Menace of&#13;
Communism.''&#13;
&#13;
PHI MU ALPHA SINFONIA&#13;
RECEIVES PROVINCE VI AWARD&#13;
The Morningside college chapter of Phi&#13;
Mu Alpha Sinfonia professional music fraternity, received the Best Chapter of Province VI award at the officer's workshop&#13;
held on Morningside's campus this week.&#13;
The presentation was made by Carlton A.&#13;
Chaffee, province governor, and was received by Kn Wolfswinkel, local chapter&#13;
president, and Dr. Donald N. Morrison,&#13;
faculty advisor.&#13;
The award is presented bi-annually to&#13;
the chapter in the province that has shown&#13;
the most prograss in activities and leadership.&#13;
Other chapters in the province are located at the University of Nebraska, University of South Dakota, University of&#13;
Omaha, Northern State Teacher's College,&#13;
and Nebraska State College.&#13;
&#13;
New Faculty&#13;
Two new members have been added to&#13;
the faculty since the last Morningsider&#13;
went to press.&#13;
Dr. Edna Landros, now professor of&#13;
foreign language, is teaching Spanish. She&#13;
received her bachelor of arts degree at the&#13;
University of Kansas and was awarded a&#13;
Ph. D degree from the University of Oregon.&#13;
She has also studied at the University of&#13;
Chicago, University of California, Harvard,&#13;
and the University of Mexico.&#13;
Before&#13;
coming to Morningside, Dr. Landros taught&#13;
at the universities of Oregon, Arizona and&#13;
New Mexico.&#13;
Mr. John Watt has taken over duties as&#13;
assistant professor of foreign language at&#13;
Morningside. He has just returned from&#13;
Leon, France, where he studied as a Fullbright scholar.&#13;
Mr. Watt is teaching&#13;
French.&#13;
&#13;
Religious Groups&#13;
Hold Retreats&#13;
Two of the religious groups of the Morningside college campus held retreats on&#13;
Saturday, September 30.&#13;
The Methodist Student Movement spent&#13;
Saturday and Saturday night at the Goodwill camp grounds. Dr . Buckwalter, district superintendent of the Fort Dodge district of the Methodist church, was guest&#13;
speaker at that meeting.&#13;
The Lutheran Student Association members went to the Salvation Army camp.&#13;
Consultants for their all-day session were&#13;
Rev. Van Tassel, pastor of the First&#13;
Lutheran church, Rev. Wold, pastor of&#13;
Morningside Lutheran church, and Rev.&#13;
Kleinhans, chaplain at the Sioux City Air&#13;
Base.&#13;
&#13;
CONDUCT EUROPEAN TOUR&#13;
Orin W. Bell '18 and Mrs. Bell of Orange,&#13;
California in conjunction with World Travel Tours, Inc. will conduct an European&#13;
tour next June. The tour group leaves&#13;
New York June 27th for a Jet flight to&#13;
London.&#13;
Anyone interested in our details can contact Mr. Bell at 1115 Van Bibber, Orange,&#13;
California.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
�FOOTING THE BILL&#13;
By Elwood Olsen, A. B. Morningside '38, Juris D. State University of&#13;
Iowa '41, LLM, George Washington&#13;
University '46. Business Mgr. Morningside College 1948&#13;
Students are paying more than ever before for their college education, but still&#13;
they do not pay the entire cost. Each year&#13;
at Morningside the administration has the&#13;
task of coming up with approximately&#13;
$300,000.00 in order to meet the difference&#13;
between what the student pays and the&#13;
actual cost of operating the College. This&#13;
$300,000.00 comes from a number of differents cources. Morningside is fortunate. in&#13;
having the support of the church, individuals, corporations, and foundations, all contributing generously to provide what the&#13;
student does not pay.&#13;
&#13;
$300.00 GRANT TO EACH MORNINGSIDER: If this $300,000.00 from outside&#13;
sources were a huge grant, divided among&#13;
the students at Morningside, about $300.00&#13;
would annually go to each one enrolled.&#13;
A student at Morningside, paying full tuition, does not pay the full cost of his education. Every student, even if he pays his&#13;
entire bill, receives a $300.00 grant which&#13;
makes his year at Morningside possible.&#13;
Generous giving has provided these grants&#13;
and has helped sponsor these young people.&#13;
Your gift to Living Endowment helps. Your&#13;
bequest in a Will helps to build up the&#13;
College's Permanent Endowment, the income from which goes directly into our&#13;
operating budget and thus helps educate&#13;
these young people. Your contribution to&#13;
the Methodist church, or MDC, helps provide these "grants" that every Morningsider receives.&#13;
There's a Second Grant, to each student,&#13;
in addition to the $300.00 one already mentioned. This is the grant that provides the&#13;
physical facilities that the young people use&#13;
every day on the campus of Morningside&#13;
College. Gifts through the years have provided fine buildings, and under President&#13;
Palmer's Twelve-Year Plan many more are&#13;
coming. If these gifts for buildings were&#13;
equally allocated to every generation of&#13;
students, the grant each would receive&#13;
annually would double the $300.00 already&#13;
mentioned.&#13;
STUDENT AID: In addition to the&#13;
above grants, Morningside give, to those&#13;
who achieve high academic distinction in&#13;
high school and college, scholarship help.&#13;
During the past year $120,254.. 00 of aid in&#13;
.&#13;
the form of scholarships, grants and rebates&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
was allocated to 417 students. Most of this&#13;
aid was "unfunded," or in other words, it&#13;
had to be raised - the College does not&#13;
have sufficient endowment (investments) to&#13;
produce the income to provide fully these&#13;
grants. Our President has just announced&#13;
a new "Wills and Estates" program through&#13;
which a determined effort will be made to&#13;
increase the endowment to $400,000.00 by&#13;
1970, and thus "fund" much of this student aid.&#13;
"Scholarships": Scholarship help is&#13;
awarded in several areas. Competition for&#13;
the awards is keen. In recognizing academic&#13;
excellence Honor Scholarships are granted&#13;
to all high school students who rank in the&#13;
upper 10 per cent of their graduating class.&#13;
These scholarships are in the amount of&#13;
$400, distributed equally over four college&#13;
years.&#13;
Competitive and Educational Scholarships&#13;
are awarded to those who have attained a&#13;
high scholastic average and have also&#13;
scored well in either the American College&#13;
Test (ACT) or the College Extrance Examination Board (CEEB) program. The&#13;
actual amount of the award varies from a&#13;
small stipend to full tuition and is dependent upon the actual financial need of the&#13;
individual application. The college works&#13;
within a specific budget when awarding&#13;
scholarships and the size of the individual&#13;
scholarships determines the number to be&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Morningside College has a number of&#13;
Grants-in Aid in such fields as music,&#13;
speech, and athletics. There are also Miniterial Rebates and Christian Service Grants&#13;
which provide one-half tuition. Veterans'&#13;
Benefits are still available to those whose&#13;
qualify, and College personnel help the student in making the necessary applications&#13;
for this aid.&#13;
Another Area of financial aid at Morningside is the opportunity for Part-time&#13;
Work. A few hours employment each week&#13;
while attending College, not only gives the&#13;
student funds necessary to help pay board&#13;
and room, but also gives valuable experience in the field of busienss and public&#13;
relations. The Sioux City community has&#13;
work for many students in a variety of professions and industries. Morningside's Student Personnel office actively helps the&#13;
students get located in jobs both on and off&#13;
campus.&#13;
&#13;
FINANCING AN EDUCATION AT&#13;
MORNINGSIDE: The College has several&#13;
plans that make it "easier'' to finance one's&#13;
education. There is a plan that fits the&#13;
need of every student and/ or his family.&#13;
No one should be prevented from attending&#13;
Morningside for financial reasons. If he&#13;
&#13;
�wants to spread payments over several&#13;
months, Morningside has a "Deferred Payment Plan." If more time is needed and&#13;
the student wants to pay after graduation,&#13;
the money can be borrowed. (at least a&#13;
part of it can.)&#13;
Deferred Payments: Under Morningside's&#13;
deferred payment plan the total cost of&#13;
tuition, fees, board and room, etc. is divided&#13;
into monthly installments which are paid&#13;
throughout the current semester. Payments,&#13;
then, must be made according to the schedule agreed upon with the student. A small&#13;
deferred payment fee is charges when this&#13;
plan is used.&#13;
Student Loans: In the future most student assistance programs will be dominated&#13;
by loans. In spite of some "unpopularity"&#13;
a few years ago, borrowing for an education today has become more acceptable.&#13;
Money available for loans has increased&#13;
enormously; but even so, Morningside could&#13;
use additional funds in order to honor fully&#13;
all worthy applications. Many alumni have&#13;
sent gifts to establish loan funds which are&#13;
administered by the Morningside Staff.&#13;
While loans are likely to be the principal&#13;
means of assisting students to pay required&#13;
tuition and fees, it is not suggested that&#13;
a student should borrow the full cost of&#13;
his education; but a loan combined with the&#13;
other student aids, plus family savings and&#13;
summer employment, should make it possible for every young person, who really&#13;
wants an education, to attend college.&#13;
It appears that much of the expanding&#13;
need for financial assistance will be furnished by loans because competition for&#13;
scholarships is high and they go to a select&#13;
few. Many donors set up scholarship funds,&#13;
others like the idea of designating their&#13;
gifts to loan funds which will then be&#13;
perpetuated for use by many generations&#13;
of young people. For some students to&#13;
meet their financial needs it will take a&#13;
scholarship, a loan, and employment, plus&#13;
whatever help the family can give. Every&#13;
student accepted unconditionally for admission to Morningside is elegible to apply for&#13;
a loan.&#13;
This growth in student loans is not peculiar to Morningside; it is nationwide. In&#13;
1956, loans to students throughout the&#13;
United States amounted to only $13 million.&#13;
But in the last two years, the Federal Government alone has furnished over 4100 million for student loans and the amount&#13;
available through this source is increasing&#13;
annually. While only 750 colleges had loan&#13;
programs a few years ago, today more&#13;
than 1500 colleges have made loan funds&#13;
available to students.&#13;
Morningside students can borrow from a&#13;
number of different sources. These loans&#13;
&#13;
give them an opportunity to spread the&#13;
cost of their education over several years.&#13;
The National Defense Education Act provides funds for loans which are made on&#13;
the basis of need. Special consideration is&#13;
given to the students with superior academic background who desire to teach in&#13;
the elementary and secondary schools, and&#13;
who intend to specialize in science, mathematics, engineering, or foreign languages.&#13;
Repayment of these federal loans begins&#13;
one year after the student ceases to attend&#13;
college and the student has ten years in&#13;
which to repay. No interest is charged&#13;
until one year after the student is out of&#13;
college, and then it is paid at the rate of&#13;
3%. If the student becomes a full-time&#13;
teacher in a public school, the loan is cancelled at the rate of 10% a year for five&#13;
years, or a total of 50% of the principal&#13;
of the loan.&#13;
Morningside has been fortunate in receiving liberal grants from the Federal&#13;
government for the making of these student loans. Last year more than three&#13;
hundred students borrowed from the National Student Defense Loan Fund. Loans&#13;
range from $100.00 to $1,000.00 (which is&#13;
the maximum which can be borrowed in any&#13;
one academic year.) The average loan at&#13;
Morningside has&#13;
been&#13;
approximately&#13;
$550.00. This loan program has aided many&#13;
in attending college who would have found&#13;
it impossible to continue their education if&#13;
they could not have borrowed.&#13;
These are other loan funds available to&#13;
Morningsiders through sources such as the&#13;
Methodist Board of Education, The Merritt&#13;
Credit Bureau Foundation, the Pickett and&#13;
Hatcher Education Fund, Eastern Star,&#13;
Consistory, P. E. 0., and many of the local&#13;
banks.&#13;
TUITION INCOME IMPORTANT: Helping the student finance the cost of his education is tremendously important to the&#13;
Morningside financial structure. No one&#13;
wants to price students out of college and&#13;
yet they must pay a part of the cost of&#13;
their education. They cannot be given&#13;
everything. Accordingly at Morningside&#13;
every possible way of financing his or her&#13;
own education is opened to the student.&#13;
71.4% of Morningside's operating budget&#13;
comes from tuition and fees. This compares&#13;
with a 59.2% average in Methodist Colleges.&#13;
With such a large percentage of our&#13;
operating income coming from tuition, it&#13;
becomes vital that student accounts be kept&#13;
liquid. Thus, the Morningside staff is continually working with its students, helping&#13;
them in every possible way to meet their&#13;
financial obligations and continue their&#13;
college education.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
�GIFT FROM INSURANCE FIRM&#13;
RECOGNIZES MORNINGSIDE'S&#13;
CONTRIBUTION TO INDUSTRY&#13;
Reproduced below is a letter from the&#13;
Farmers Insurance Group to Dr. J. Richard&#13;
Palmer. The letter contained a $500.00&#13;
check. The Farmers Insurance Groups includes Farmers Insurance Exchange, Truck&#13;
Insurance Exchange, Fire Insurance Exchange, Mid-Century Insurance Company,&#13;
and Farmers New world Life Insurance&#13;
Company. their executive offices are in&#13;
Los Angeles.&#13;
Dr. J. Richard Palmer, President&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Sioux City 6, Iowa&#13;
Dear President Palmer:&#13;
Today, young people with outstanding ability&#13;
but limited means are offered educational opportunities through scholarship and similar financial aid programs. This is a significant American tradition.&#13;
We of the Farme rs In sura n ce Group. fully&#13;
recognize the r esponsibili ty of private industry&#13;
to perpetuate this t rad ition . Our contributions&#13;
to many independent univers ities are in appreciation for the outstanding work these schools a re&#13;
doing in training young people.&#13;
Among our personnel are graduates of independent universities located in every part of the&#13;
country.&#13;
These employees a re giving valuable&#13;
servicee to our organization, to our policyholders&#13;
and to the community. We recognize the importance of these independent unive rsity trained&#13;
people and feel that our gifts to preserve these&#13;
raditions should bear some relation to the benefits&#13;
our Compan ies receive from these private schools.&#13;
Consequently, our Board of Directors adopted&#13;
a tuition scholarship program for aid in several&#13;
broad fields. A detailed statement of participation requirements is attached.&#13;
The graduates of Morningside College employed&#13;
will the Farmers Insurance Group a nd who determine the size of our contribution&#13;
for the year&#13;
1961 are:&#13;
P. J. Scaletta, Jr.&#13;
Donald Vredenburgh&#13;
It is a pleas ure to enclose our check for $500.&#13;
it as&#13;
We hope you will accept and administer&#13;
outlined in the Farmers Insurance Group Tuition&#13;
Scholarship Program.&#13;
Sincerely yours ,&#13;
J. M. Smith&#13;
Executive Director&#13;
&#13;
P. J. Scaleta, Jr. is a member of the&#13;
Class of '48 and lives at 124 W. Washington in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Donald Vredenburgh is a member of the class of '50&#13;
and lives at 12479 S. E. Solmon Ct., Portland 16, Oregon.&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC DEPARTMENT&#13;
PRESENTS COMBINED CONCERT&#13;
The Morningside college music department presented the concert band, the chamber orchestra, and the oratoria choir in a&#13;
combined concert at 8:15 p. m., Monday,&#13;
November 20, at the East Junior high&#13;
school auditorium.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
In the first part of the program, the&#13;
concert band, under the direction of James&#13;
Hustis played Pavana by William Byrd,&#13;
Overture to Nabucco by Giuseppe Verde,&#13;
Slavanic Dances by Antonin Dvorak, and&#13;
Dubsnushka by Rimsky-Korsakov.&#13;
The second half of the program featured&#13;
the oratorio choir, under the direction of&#13;
James H. Wood, and the chamber orchestra,&#13;
under the direction of Leo Kucinski. They&#13;
presented the third act of Richard Wagner's&#13;
Die Meistersinger in concert version.&#13;
Soloists for Die Meistersinger were&#13;
James Wood, baritone; Wade Raridon,&#13;
tenor; Mrs. Rosemary Raridon, soprano;&#13;
James McDonald, tenor; and Carol Guthmiller, contralto.&#13;
&#13;
DR. BAUER HONORED&#13;
Dr. E. Theodore Bauer, Senior Professor&#13;
of Sociology at Morningside College and&#13;
head of the Sociology Department, was accepted for membership in the American&#13;
Association of Marriage Counselors, Inc. as&#13;
of June 1, 1961. The Association is the&#13;
only nationally recognized professional&#13;
organization of marriage counselors.&#13;
Dr. Bauer is recognized as an authority&#13;
on marriage counselling and has had much&#13;
experience professionally.&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY-STUDENT&#13;
RECEPTION HELD&#13;
The traditional Thanksgiving facultystudent reception at Morningside College&#13;
was held Tuesday (November 21) from&#13;
8 p. m. to midnight in Dimmitt hall.&#13;
The presidents of the four classes greeted&#13;
guests. Faculty members and their wives&#13;
were on hand to meet students.&#13;
The purpose of the reception is to acquaint the students with the faculty. Following the reception, a dance was held in&#13;
the dining hall of Dimmitt Hall.&#13;
&#13;
�ALUMNI RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE&#13;
'16 Grad Lauded&#13;
In Dallas&#13;
Howard A. Allen '16, was feted by more&#13;
than 1500 former students and associates&#13;
at an open house in Dallas, Texas on Sunday, October 8th. Mr. Allan had served as&#13;
coach and principal in Adamson High&#13;
School in Dallas for 41 years. He went to&#13;
Dallas from Iowa in 1921; coached until&#13;
the 1928-1929 football season and became&#13;
principal in 1935.&#13;
A feature article in the Dallas Morning&#13;
News of October 1, paid high tribute to&#13;
Mr. Allen. Asked about the caliber of his&#13;
students across the span of years, "if they&#13;
are softer and less capable than their predecessors?" he replied as quoted from the&#13;
Morning News," Well, the best ones today&#13;
are as good or even better than those who&#13;
have gone before. And they're better informed. You can bet many will make great&#13;
names for themselves, in college and later.&#13;
Teaching too is far better than before . . .&#13;
it goes so far beyond what we used to&#13;
teach, and I don't think there are too many&#13;
'frills' today".&#13;
"After all, you don't run all the students down the same track you used to.&#13;
Job classifications are in the thousands,&#13;
while when I was in high school you could&#13;
name 20 and get them all. You've got to&#13;
prepare youngsters for this complex, specialized world."&#13;
Mr. Allen continutes to serve as manager&#13;
of Adamson High's unique scholarship&#13;
foundation. Again quoting Mr. Allen from&#13;
the article, "As far as I know no other&#13;
high school in America has anything like&#13;
this. Through the years it has developed&#13;
to the point that it contains $250.00 and&#13;
yields nearly $10.00 annually in dividends&#13;
and interest."&#13;
"The yield has permitted us to send&#13;
many deserving Adamson graduates to&#13;
college."&#13;
Mrs. Allen, formerly Peggy Johnson of&#13;
Cleghorn, Iowa and Mr. Allen were presented a console model color television set&#13;
&#13;
at the open house.&#13;
The 1916 Sioux in which Allen appears&#13;
as a Junior, says of him - "Hod is primarily and above all a student and accordingly has the respect of the faculty as well&#13;
as students. After mastering his assignments he finds time to play baseball, rush&#13;
ads, fill the office of Class President, and&#13;
participate in social life. He is modest,&#13;
unassuming and congenial. A man among&#13;
men. To know him is to admire him."&#13;
&#13;
RE-ELECTED TO DES MOINES&#13;
BOARD OF EDUCATION&#13;
Mary Cruikshank Grefe '43 (Mrs. Roland&#13;
Grefe) has been re-elected to a six year&#13;
term on the Des Moines Board of Education. She was elected to her first six year&#13;
term in 1955 and was president during the&#13;
1960-61 school year.&#13;
Mrs. Grefe taught at Spirit Lake and&#13;
Forest City prior to teaching at Roosevelt&#13;
High School in Des Moines from 1946&#13;
through 1948.&#13;
Roland Grefe '41 is a Des Moines attor-&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
�ney. The Grefes have a son Roger, eleven&#13;
years old. They live at 5725 N. Waterbury&#13;
Rd., Des Moines 12, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Verl Crow '34 Cover&#13;
&#13;
Subiect of Magazine&#13;
Verl Crow '34 has been elected president&#13;
of the Iowa State Education Association,&#13;
and was featured as the cover personality&#13;
of the October issue of "Midland Schools".&#13;
Midland Schools is the official publication&#13;
of the ISEA.&#13;
Miss Crow was the keynote speaker at&#13;
the ISEA convention in Des Moines on&#13;
October 19th. In 1948-49 she was president&#13;
of the Sioux City Local, in 1949-50 she was&#13;
president of the Northwest District and in&#13;
1950-53 was a member of the ISEA Executive Board. She was a state NEA director&#13;
from 1954-60 and was Vice-President of&#13;
ISEA in 1960-61.&#13;
She received her MSE degree at Drake&#13;
this past summer.&#13;
Her teaching experience includes a rural&#13;
school in Woodbury County (and the added&#13;
duty of fireman for a heating stove). From&#13;
t he rural school she moved to teaching at&#13;
Holly Springs and from there to Alton,&#13;
then to the Sioux City school system. She&#13;
is currently dean of students at North&#13;
Junior High School.&#13;
Verl has been a loyal alumna and is at&#13;
present serving on the Alumni Award Committee of the Alumni Association.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS KINGSBURY HONORED&#13;
Francis A. Kingsbury '43 has been named&#13;
an associate of the Photographic Society of&#13;
America at the society's annual convention in New York.&#13;
He was cited for "his assistance to yout h&#13;
in photography, for his service to the&#13;
society in organizational activity and for&#13;
his accomplishments as an exhibitor and&#13;
judge."&#13;
A banker in Ponca, Nebraska, Francis&#13;
is founder of the North Central Camera&#13;
Club council, past president of the Sioux&#13;
City Camera Club and a frequent lecturer&#13;
for the club. HE is area representative for&#13;
the society.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Kingsbury is the former Vernice&#13;
Christiansen ('45).&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE RESSEGIEU RESIGNS&#13;
AFTER LONG SERVICE&#13;
Charlotte Ressegieu '36, resigned recently&#13;
from her post as executive director of the&#13;
Woodbury County Society of Crippled&#13;
Children and Adults, Inc. She had held&#13;
the position for nearly 12 years. She was&#13;
also executive director of the Siouxland&#13;
Rehabilitation, which is operated by the&#13;
society.&#13;
In an item in the December 6th issue of&#13;
the Sioux City Journal, David J . Albert,&#13;
president of the society was quoted, "I&#13;
deeply regret to have received the resignation of Charlotte Ressegieu. She has been&#13;
an untiring servant of the center and of&#13;
the entire Siouxland area. Her sincere and&#13;
very devoted service to our center has made&#13;
it one of the outstanding rehabilitation centers in the entire country."&#13;
Mrs. Ray Murphy, vice president of the&#13;
society said in the same article in the&#13;
Journal, "Her name in synonymous with&#13;
the Center. She will leave a mark in Sioux&#13;
City as a monument to her."&#13;
The center is supported through charity,&#13;
and has grown since Miss Ressegieu's&#13;
appointment in 1950 from a small office in&#13;
downtown Sioux City to a new center&#13;
across the street from the Methodist hospital. The hospital and the center are connected by a tunnel passageway under the&#13;
street.&#13;
The Journal quotes Miss Ressegieu upon&#13;
her resignation: "In the spring of 1950&#13;
with courage, hope and a look to the future&#13;
for the welfare of our crippled children and&#13;
adults we opened the Center in Bancroft&#13;
school building with a prayer and little&#13;
money."&#13;
"Since that time with many hours of&#13;
planning and toil we achieved our goals&#13;
and present facilities."&#13;
"I wish to express my heartfelt thanks&#13;
to the many board . members who have&#13;
given so generously of themselves and have&#13;
been so kind and thoughtful to those we&#13;
serve."&#13;
&#13;
�Language Laboratory&#13;
To be Installed&#13;
A new $10,000 language laboratory will&#13;
soon be installed at Morningside college.&#13;
The laborat ory has been purchased to&#13;
enable students studying foreign languages&#13;
to better develop their listening and speaking abilities.&#13;
The new unit will consist of 20 stations&#13;
and a master console. Each of the stations&#13;
will be equipped with speaking, listening&#13;
and recording equipment. The master console plays a selection, and then the individual student listens and records his&#13;
answer.&#13;
The master console can play four languages at the same time and the individual&#13;
stations will be arranged so that students&#13;
of French, German, Russian, and Spanish&#13;
can all study at the same t ime without&#13;
bothering each other.&#13;
&#13;
LEON HICKMAN ON&#13;
PANEL AT COLUMBIA&#13;
Leon E. Hickm an '22, Executive VicePresident, Aluminum Corporation of America, was one of three panel participant s&#13;
at the Deans Day program for the Alumni&#13;
Association of the School of Business of&#13;
Columbia University in New York City on&#13;
December 2nd.&#13;
The topic was "Corporate Behavior in&#13;
the Market Place". Dean Courtney C.&#13;
Brown presided. In addition to Mr. Hickman, the other two panelists were Mr.&#13;
Philip Sporn, President, American E1ectric&#13;
Power Company and the Honorable Luther&#13;
H. Hodges, Secretary of Commerce, United&#13;
States of America.&#13;
Mr. Myron Hulse . .37 (president of the&#13;
New York Morningside Alumni Club) and&#13;
Mrs. Hulse of New York City and Mrs.&#13;
Clark Scott '24 and Mrs. Scott of Bridgeport, Connecticut were in attendance.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ALUMNUS&#13;
PART OF MUSIC PROGRAM&#13;
IN OMAHA SCHOOLS&#13;
Darwyn Snyder '48, head of the Instrumental Music in the Westside Community&#13;
&#13;
Schools of Omaha, is an integral part of&#13;
an outstanding program developed in 1947.&#13;
In 1947 the Westside schools had 344 children and 17 staff members and has now&#13;
grown to 7043 children and 305 staff members. School facilities have continued to&#13;
expand to meet the needs of the rapidly&#13;
growing system. Westside High School is&#13;
now accomodating 1975 students.&#13;
In the beginning music aptitude tests are&#13;
administered to all fourth grade students.&#13;
The music specialist studies and compares&#13;
each child's test with his academic achievement scores and makes preparations for an&#13;
interview. All interested students are personlly interviewed and given an apportunity to try the instrument of their choice.&#13;
After studying the test results and working directly with the student, an instrument&#13;
is recommended which meets the physical&#13;
and psychological demands of the child.&#13;
meet with an instrumental&#13;
Students&#13;
specialist for a period of 30 minutes twice&#13;
each week. Vocal music is taught in the&#13;
classroom while the instrumental students&#13;
attend band and orchestra classes. This&#13;
eliminates any possibility of instrumentalists mising academic work and affords&#13;
these students an opportunity to sing with&#13;
t heir classmates the other three days of&#13;
the week.&#13;
In Junior and Senior high school several&#13;
groups are available to the instrumentalist. There is a brass quartett, a saxaphone&#13;
sextet, a dance band, a trombone octet, a&#13;
clarinet choir, a string quartet, a flute&#13;
septet, a junior high symphonette, two&#13;
junior high orchestras, four junior high&#13;
bands, the Westside symphony orchestra,&#13;
and the Westside high school band.&#13;
In addition to these opportunities several&#13;
of the pupils participate in the Omaha&#13;
Youth Orchestra.&#13;
The 1958 Westside High School Band&#13;
attended the 25th Anniversary New Years&#13;
Festivities at the Orange Bowl.&#13;
Mrs. Snyder is the former Joan Meyer&#13;
('49). She is appearing as Portia in t he&#13;
production of Julius Caesar at the Omaha&#13;
Playhouse.&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
�NEW YORK&#13;
NEW YORK - New York Club president&#13;
Myron Hulse ('37) and Mrs. Hulse hosted&#13;
the New York Club at their home in New&#13;
York City on November 17th. President of&#13;
Morningside, J. Richard Palmer, Don Poppen '57 of the Admissions department, and&#13;
Louis Croston were guests at the meeting.&#13;
The New York City area club elected the&#13;
following officers for the new year. Myron&#13;
Hulse was re-elected president, Dr. James&#13;
A. Goss, Jr. '37 was elected vice-president,&#13;
and Ruth Olsen Granstrom '41 was elected&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer. Not the least of the&#13;
newly elected officers was the official&#13;
mascot - Mr. Go-Go, the very personable&#13;
poodle of the Hulse's.&#13;
Dr. Max Stern '41 and Mrs. Stern of&#13;
Rochester travelled the greatest distance&#13;
to the meeting.&#13;
Others present were; Rev. Francis Brockman, '43, Rev. Wm. K. Burns '47, Dr. James&#13;
A. Coss, Jr. '37, and Mrs. Coss, Mrs.&#13;
Charles Gandek '38, Rev. Ivan Gosso '44,&#13;
Marvin Granstrom '42, Ruth Olsen Granstrom '41, Jacqueline Ecker Kirchner '5,7&#13;
and Mr. Kirchner, Julia La Grone '28,&#13;
Frank Leamer '26, Mildred Torbett Leamer&#13;
'2 5, Hobart Mossman '31 and Mrs. Mossman, Joe Ott '27, Ralph Pierce .. 12, Mrs.&#13;
Ralph Pierce, Ron Rawson .. 39, Ruth Miller Rawson FF, Clark Scott '24 and Mrs.&#13;
Soott, Esther Montgomery Smyres '18 and&#13;
Rev. Smyres, Asbury Stromberg '25, Lelia&#13;
Binger Stromberg '28, Rev. Don Walton '17,&#13;
Bessie Ried Walton '21, Robert Worsley&#13;
.. 37 and Mrs. Worsley.&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Top picture left to right, Don Walton ' 17,&#13;
Bessie Ried Walton '21, Joe Ott '27, Frank&#13;
Leamer '26, Mildred Torbett Leamer '25 .&#13;
Center picture left to right, Mrs. Hobart&#13;
Mossman, Mrs. Ruth Hayward&#13;
Gandek '38,&#13;
Hobart Mossman '31 . Hobart Mossman is the&#13;
older son of Dr. Frank Mossman '03 , a former&#13;
president of Morningside College.&#13;
Bottom picture left to right, Myron Hulse&#13;
('37) president of the New York Club, Reverend Roy Smyres, and Clark Scott '24.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
�WASHINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Dale Rogers, Don Poppen, Roger Burgess,&#13;
President Palmer.&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON D. C. - The Washington D. C. Club met at the Little Tea House&#13;
for a dinner meeting on December 18th.&#13;
Roger Burgess, president of the club, presided. President J . Richard Palmer, told&#13;
about what is happening at Morningside.&#13;
Officers elected for the next year were&#13;
Packard Wolle '40, President, Eugene Emme&#13;
'41, Vice president and Carol Larsen Shafer '30, Secretary-treasurer. Several alumni&#13;
from the Baltimore Club were present.&#13;
They were Dorothy Surber Chiles '32, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Thomas Cox, Rev. John W. Payne&#13;
'43 (president of the Baltimore club) and&#13;
Mrs. Payne, and Ernest Madison '38 and&#13;
&#13;
GRAMMER GIRL REUNION&#13;
A group of Morningside Alumnae and&#13;
their families, who call themselves the&#13;
Grammer girls, had a reunion on June 18th&#13;
at Blue Lake Shelter House, Onawa, Iowa.&#13;
The name "Grammer girls" stems from&#13;
the fact that those involved were all girls&#13;
who during the war years lived in a house&#13;
off campus with Miss Lois Grammar,&#13;
Associate Professor of Music Education, as&#13;
their head resident.&#13;
A potluck dinner was served and the day&#13;
was spent swimming and reminiscing. In&#13;
the evening, a beatnick version of the&#13;
"Little Nell" skit made famous by Audrey&#13;
Hughes and Beverly Rehnblom back in the&#13;
"good old days", was presented by their&#13;
children Lynn and Jayne Miller, and Kim&#13;
and Debby Goodrich. The title of the new&#13;
version - "We Ain't got the Lettuce for&#13;
&#13;
Helen Tiedeman McDonald is carry ing out&#13;
her duties as secretary of the Washington&#13;
Club.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Madison. From the Washington D. C.&#13;
area were Robert Bates '53 and Mrs. Bates,&#13;
Wm. Bruce Lindsay '41 and Ila Eberle&#13;
Lindsay ('41), Earl E. Houseman '37 and&#13;
Mrs. Houseman, Dale Rogers '39 and Mrs.&#13;
Rogers, Roger Burgess '50 and Mrs. Burgess, Roscoe Carter '12, B. R. Hensley '50,&#13;
Mrs. Boyd Shafer (Carol Larsen '30),&#13;
Frederick Figert '30 and Mrs. Figert, Eugene Emme '41 and Ruth Rance Emme '41,&#13;
Maurice Scheider '41 and Mrs. Scheider,&#13;
Helen McDonald '21, H. G. Morrison Betty&#13;
Saunderson Brown . .42, Mrs J . M. Saunderson, Packard Wolle and Helen Osbey Wolle,&#13;
Marguerite Dewell Harrison .. 21, and E.&#13;
H. Erickson and Mrs. Erickson.&#13;
this Real Cool Pad."&#13;
The Millers and their four children were&#13;
enroute to New Jersey from Alaska. The&#13;
Goodriches and their four children flew&#13;
their own plane from Kentucky to be present.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
�DES MOINES&#13;
The Des Moines Club under the leadership of Merle Wood, Supervisor of Business&#13;
Education in the Des Moines Schools, and&#13;
president of the Des Moines Alumni Club,&#13;
sponsored a coffee hour in the Kirkwood&#13;
Hotel during the ISEA Meeting in October.&#13;
Morningsiders from Des Moines and many&#13;
points in Iowa were present and had a&#13;
pleasant time.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
�MRS. ROY JUSTUS&#13;
&#13;
2432 CLINTON AVENUE&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Langley Justus '25 sent the card,&#13;
as reproduced above, in answer to a letter&#13;
written to her after reading a feature&#13;
article in the Minneapolis Sunday Tribune.&#13;
The feature article was titled "They Seek&#13;
to Revive Lost Art of Handwriting" , and&#13;
states "One indication that interest in good&#13;
handwriting may be picking up is an exhibit sponsored by the Society of Italic&#13;
Handwriting Currently touring this country. These displays of an almost lost art&#13;
w:ill be shown through November at the&#13;
Minneapolis School of Art beginning October 30.&#13;
"Based in London, the Society for Italic&#13;
Handwriting is the vanguard of a slow&#13;
renaissance in beautiful, slanted writing&#13;
such as developed by 15th century scribes&#13;
studiously copying papal briefs."&#13;
"Though beautiful as any fine art, italic&#13;
handwriting serves a purpose of high practicality, according to the movement's leading expert in the Twin Cities area.''&#13;
The expert referred to is Mrs. Justus.&#13;
She says you never see a scribbler among&#13;
italic writers, no matter how fast they&#13;
write. She teaches italic handwriting to all&#13;
freshmen at the Minneapolis School of Art,&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS 4,&#13;
&#13;
MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
as a part of her course in calligraphy,&#13;
which is required of all students at the&#13;
school.&#13;
The article further states, "a pert, vivacious woman with youthful enthusiasm for&#13;
her art form, Mrs. Justus hopes civilization's handwriting can be saved through&#13;
the italic style.&#13;
"She points out that our schools teach&#13;
youngsters first to print discreet script&#13;
letters and later to write cursively, joining&#13;
other entirely different letters. This is awkward and confusing and students constantly&#13;
fight the trend toward illegibility despite&#13;
the lure of Palmer method citation."&#13;
"BY TEACHING THE ITALIC STYLE&#13;
INITIALLY, WE COULD PRODUCE NOT&#13;
ONLY LEGIBLE WRITING BUT BEAUTIFUL WRITING, MRS. JUSTUS CONTENDS."&#13;
Special pens carefully edged, are used for&#13;
italic writing. There a re none as yet manufactured in the United States. They are&#13;
available in England.&#13;
The italic script as reproduced on the&#13;
card is that of Mrs. Justus and demonstrates her ability.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
�PHILADELPHIA&#13;
A delightful meeting of Philadelphia&#13;
Area Alumni was held Sunday evening,&#13;
November 19, in the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Roger Davis in Philadelphia. The group&#13;
enjoyed a buffet supper and a pleasant&#13;
evening around the Davis fire place. Present were Ralph Pitman '20, Mrs. Pitman,&#13;
Ralph Pitman, Jr. , Roger Davis '51, Mrs .&#13;
Davis, Rev. Lloyd Hunsley '37, Mrs. Hunsley Dick King ('41), Louis Croston, President Palmer and Don Poppen.&#13;
Dick King ('41), president of the Philadelphia group and member of the College&#13;
Board of Trustees and Mrs. King entertained President Palmer, Don Poppen and&#13;
Louis Croston at dinner in their home at&#13;
Chads Ford at noon on November 19th.&#13;
The accompanying picture was taken in&#13;
the King home. Rebecca King, in a Morning,s ide "T" shirt listens attentively to the&#13;
blandishments of President Palmer. Rebecca was two months old when the picture&#13;
was taken.&#13;
&#13;
OMAHA&#13;
The Omaha Club were hosts to Morningside Alumni faculty and friends at a coffee&#13;
hour following the Morningside vs. Omaha&#13;
University game in Omaha, September&#13;
16th.&#13;
President Tom Green '48 was in&#13;
charge of arrangements.&#13;
A Hawaiian dinner and dancing were&#13;
h eld later in the ev·e ning.&#13;
&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
Dr. Palmer had a meeting with Florida&#13;
Alumni in Miami in December. Charles&#13;
Cushman '11 made the arrangements for&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
�MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL The&#13;
Minneapolis - St. Paul alumni club had a&#13;
meeting in St. Paul on November 8th. Present from the college were A. W. Buckingham '39, public relations director and Mrs.&#13;
Buckingham (Marion Miller . .41) and Louis&#13;
H. Croston, alumni director and Mrs. Croston (Hazel Surber '29).&#13;
In attendance were Cecil Anderson '31,&#13;
Virginia Bailey '61, Ron Boulden '60, Gen&#13;
Metcalf Danforth '31, Wm. B. Danforth '30,&#13;
Esme Franzen '59, Gordon Fountain '59,&#13;
Frank Heilman '08, Florence Clark Heilman&#13;
'08, Carolyn Meyer '59, Marjorie Rowlands&#13;
Peterson '58, Roy Peterson '58, Gary Ritz&#13;
('60), Sharon Swanson Ritz ( '60), Kay&#13;
Long Sutton ('37 ), Mr. Sutton, and Cyril&#13;
Upham '15.&#13;
Gordon Fountain acted as Master of&#13;
Ceremonies. An election resulted in these&#13;
new officers for the coming year - President, Esme Franzen '59, Vice-Presidents,&#13;
Florence Clark Heilman '08, Cyril Upham&#13;
'15, Carolyn Meyer '59, Gary Ritz ('60),&#13;
and Secretary-Treasurer, Gordon Fountain&#13;
'59.&#13;
&#13;
Shown in photographs taken at the Minneapolis meeting are,: Top picture; Genevieve&#13;
Metcalf Danforth '31, Esme Franzen '59,&#13;
Gordon Fountain '59, Sharon Swanson Ritz&#13;
('60), and Gary Ritz ('60).&#13;
Center picture Don Boulden '60 at the&#13;
left, and Cyril Upham '15, at right.&#13;
Bottom picture, left to right; and for side&#13;
side of table; Sharon Swanson Ritz ('60),&#13;
Gary Ritz ('60), Roy Peterson '58, Marjorie&#13;
Rowlands Peterson '58, Carolyn Meyer '59,&#13;
this side of table facing away from camera,&#13;
Marian Miller Buckingham ('42), Kay Long&#13;
Sutton ('37), and Mr. Sutton.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE AUTHORS&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDER welcomes any reviews or notices concerning books authored by Morninsiders. An alumni&#13;
&#13;
book&#13;
&#13;
shelf has been started in the Alumni Office.&#13;
LONGHORNS BRING CULTURE&#13;
by August H. Schatz&#13;
&#13;
August H. Schatz '12 has written a book&#13;
Longhorns Bring Culture which is being&#13;
published by the Christopher Publishing&#13;
House of Boston.&#13;
From a revie·w of the book in the Sioux&#13;
City Sunday Journal, Louise Zerschling, reviewer, states "A&#13;
wealth of western&#13;
South Dakota history&#13;
of particular interest&#13;
is this Dakota territorial centennial year .&#13;
is provided in Longhorns Bring Culture&#13;
and because western&#13;
South Dakota was&#13;
America last true&#13;
"frontier" of the old&#13;
west this book wil&#13;
provide fascinating&#13;
reading to all devotees of western lore.&#13;
"The book is not fiction, but a most&#13;
readable history of the Black Hills ranching&#13;
area, compiled by Mr. Schatz through years&#13;
of research, from personal reports&#13;
of&#13;
Dakota pioneers, most of whom now are&#13;
dead, and from his own early day experiences.&#13;
"Mr. Schatz's own life represents that&#13;
type of American success story that has&#13;
proved the foundation of America's greatness, a type of success story that may&#13;
never be repeated by todays ease-accustomed young Americans. In fact, some of&#13;
the most charming sections of Long Horns&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Bring Culture - hinting at a true - life&#13;
story that could well be booklength - are&#13;
the tales Mr. Schatz included of his pioneer&#13;
parents.&#13;
&#13;
"Today, Mr. Schatz is a greyhaired, quiet&#13;
spoken and quick witted retired school&#13;
teacher. Few, if any, of his former st udents and fellow teachers here had the&#13;
slightest conception of his picturesque&#13;
background.&#13;
"For when this educator, who now has a&#13;
master's degree, decided at the age of 18&#13;
to go to college, h e had only 12 months of&#13;
formal schooling, and had none at all for&#13;
the preceding 11 years.&#13;
"Written with forthrightness and simplicity, and enlivened by flashes of Mr.&#13;
Schatz's inimitable humor and touches of&#13;
insight gained through his knowledge of&#13;
psycholoy, Long Horns Bring Culture is an&#13;
addition to the nation's western booklore&#13;
as well as a major contribution to South&#13;
Dakota's and the midwest's historical publications."&#13;
Mrs. Schatz (Isobel Webb '14) did the&#13;
indexing for the book. The book sells for&#13;
$4.75.&#13;
&#13;
NEW HORIZONS FOR&#13;
MANAGEMENT&#13;
Packard Wolle '40 is the author of a&#13;
book, New Horizons for Management, r ecently released by the National Institute&#13;
for Leadership.&#13;
&#13;
�Packard received his master's and Doctor's degrees from American University&#13;
and is a government administrator on the&#13;
part time faculty at George Washington&#13;
University. He is an employee of the&#13;
Labor department.&#13;
In addition to the new book, he has&#13;
authored articles for the National Office&#13;
Management Association, has lectured at&#13;
the army command management school,&#13;
and has given navy executive lectures.&#13;
In his new book, Dr. Wolle points out&#13;
that a new form of management, which he&#13;
calls plural management, has been successfully employed by some large businesses.&#13;
It is his opioion that some of the principles employed in those firms of sharing&#13;
management responsibility should be applied in the federal gove. nment.&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
THE LEGACY FOR HIROSHIMA&#13;
Allen Brown '49, has finished a book in&#13;
collaboration with Dr. Edward Teller, widely&#13;
known as the "Father of the H-Bomb",&#13;
that will be published by Doubleday and&#13;
Company next March under the title : The&#13;
Legacy of Hiroshima.&#13;
Allen has been a journalist for ten years&#13;
following his tenure as editor of the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
He has worked as reporter, editor or columnist for such papers&#13;
as the Council Bluffs Nonpareil, Des&#13;
Moines Register and Tribune, San Francisco Examiner and the San Francisco&#13;
Chronicle. He is now a free lance wr iter&#13;
and lives in Mill Valley, California - Box&#13;
161.&#13;
&#13;
MANUAL FOR LAW&#13;
STENOGRAPHERS&#13;
Evangeline Sletwold ("25) of Chicago&#13;
has published and revised an expanded&#13;
second edition of MANUAL FOR LAW&#13;
STENOGRAPHERS.&#13;
The manual is designed to serve law stenographers and&#13;
secretaries, young educators who type their&#13;
&#13;
own documents, law office managers who&#13;
need a form book, lawyers who do not&#13;
have time to train inexperienced personnel,&#13;
teachers of secretarial subjects, and stenographers who seek an introduction to the&#13;
type of work done by law stenographers&#13;
and secretaries.&#13;
Miss Sletwold is a legal secretary of extensive experience. In addition to her association with the well-known law firm of&#13;
Heth, Lister &amp; Flynn, she originated and&#13;
taught the class in law stenography that&#13;
has been offered in three of the outstanding evening schools in Chicago. Her most&#13;
recent teaching association was with the&#13;
College of Commerce, DePaul University.&#13;
She was a charter member of Metropolitan&#13;
Business and Professional Women's Club&#13;
was the organizer of Legal Secretaries&#13;
association in Chicago. She has served as&#13;
chairman of the Career Advancement Committee of both organizations.&#13;
The book is obtainable at Burdette Smith&#13;
Company, 111 West Washington Street,&#13;
Chicago 2, Illinois and sells for $7.00 per&#13;
copy.&#13;
&#13;
ADELIA MacBETH RETIRES&#13;
Adelia Hill MacBeth '21, has retired after&#13;
25 years of teaching at the secondary and&#13;
junior high school level. Mrs. Mac Beth&#13;
was recognized in her home town paper as&#13;
"quick to defend youth, when discussing&#13;
juvenile delinquency, and emphasizes that&#13;
parents and teachers must continue to be&#13;
patient, as they guide their youth with love&#13;
and understanding."&#13;
Mrs. MacBeth lives in Maxwell, Iowa.&#13;
Her son Ed Hemenway, class of '50, and&#13;
whose picture appears with the Des Moines&#13;
group in this issue of the Morningsider, is&#13;
Distributive Education Coordinator in the&#13;
Des Moines school.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
�THE&#13;
VOL. XX&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDER&#13;
Dece mber, 196 1&#13;
&#13;
No. 2&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GIVE $54,386 IN&#13;
FUND YEAR ENDING JULY 31, 1961&#13;
LIVING ENDOW. STARTS 21st YEAR&#13;
In the years 1940 and 1941 a dedicated&#13;
group of Morningside alumni corresponded&#13;
and later met together to set up Morningside's Living Endowment Fund. The first&#13;
fund year ended in 1942. At the outset&#13;
pledge cards were distributed and pledges&#13;
obtained for yearly contributions.&#13;
The fund was named Living Endowment&#13;
because a yearly contribution was considered to be the equivalent of interest on&#13;
regular endowment. For example a gift of&#13;
$100.00 is the equivalent of 5% interest on&#13;
$2,000.00 of regular endowment, a gift of&#13;
$10.00 is the equivalent of the interest on&#13;
$200.00 of regular endowment, or one of&#13;
$1,000.00 is equivalent to the interest on&#13;
$20,000 regular endowment.&#13;
Regular endowment is that money given&#13;
to the college through the years, designated&#13;
as regular endowment, and which cannot be&#13;
spent. Only the income from it can be&#13;
used for college operations. So Living Endowment makes it possible for an alumnus/a who cannot give $10,000, $2,000, or&#13;
$20,000 to endowment to give the equivalent&#13;
of the interest from such a sum.&#13;
Some Morningsiders have participated in&#13;
the fund for all of the twent y years. Many&#13;
others have contributed every year since&#13;
their graduation, or since leaving Morningside. Some others have perfect records but&#13;
started later than the initial year.&#13;
Approximately $100,000 has come to&#13;
Morningside in the past twenty years&#13;
through the Living Endowment Fund. The&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
fund offers every Alumnus/ a an opportunity to support his or her belief in a program of higher education, and to participate in Morningside's role in that program.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 1915&#13;
FIRST IN PARTICIPATION&#13;
The class of 1915 bettered its participation percentage in the 1960-61 Living Endowment Fund to again top all other&#13;
classes.&#13;
Last year 34.6 % of the graduates and&#13;
former members of the class participated&#13;
in the Living Endowment Fund and 38.4%&#13;
participated in all alumni giving. The comparative figures for last year were 31.5%&#13;
to Living Endowment and 35.2% to all&#13;
alumni giving.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 1911 IN 2ND PLACE&#13;
In second place was the Class of 1911&#13;
who jumped from 14th place in the previous&#13;
years fund. They had a 10.9 % increase in&#13;
Living Endowment participation and a&#13;
13.6% increase in total fund par ticipiation. There were other very notable increases and some decreases.&#13;
The following table shows how the&#13;
classes finished in the 1960-61 fund year&#13;
ending July 31, 1961. The percentage&#13;
figure indicates the ratio of how many&#13;
members of a class (graduates and former&#13;
students) gave in propor tion to the number&#13;
of the class on the current mailing list.&#13;
&#13;
�PARTICIPATION BY CLASSES&#13;
1960-61&#13;
&#13;
PARTICIPATION BY STATES&#13;
Number of Alumni&#13;
Contributing&#13;
&#13;
1959-60&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
1915&#13;
34.6 38.4&#13;
31 5 35.2&#13;
1 I&#13;
2&#13;
1911&#13;
28.9 31.6&#13;
18.0 18.0 14 I&#13;
3&#13;
1904&#13;
23.8 23.8&#13;
14 3 14.3 21 I&#13;
4&#13;
1905&#13;
23.3 26.7&#13;
15 2 15 2 20 I&#13;
5&#13;
1913&#13;
22.7 28.8&#13;
20.3 26 6 10 I&#13;
6&#13;
1902&#13;
22.2 22.2&#13;
12.5 12 5 26 I&#13;
7&#13;
1922&#13;
20.7 26.5&#13;
21.4 26.8&#13;
7 D&#13;
8&#13;
1918&#13;
19.7 22.9&#13;
20 6 21.1&#13;
9 D&#13;
9&#13;
1917&#13;
19.0 22.2&#13;
26.1 30.5&#13;
4 D&#13;
10 to 1901&#13;
18.8 18.8&#13;
28.6 28.6&#13;
3 D&#13;
11&#13;
1914&#13;
18.2 18.8&#13;
30.4 30.4&#13;
2 D&#13;
12&#13;
1906&#13;
16.7 20.8&#13;
18.5 18 5 13 D&#13;
13&#13;
1926&#13;
16.1 1.76&#13;
16.7 20 3 17 D&#13;
14&#13;
1920&#13;
16.0 16.0&#13;
25 0 28.8&#13;
5 D&#13;
15&#13;
1919&#13;
15.7 15.7&#13;
23.3 24.7&#13;
6 D&#13;
16&#13;
1910&#13;
15.6 15.6&#13;
20.7 20.7&#13;
8 D&#13;
17&#13;
1908&#13;
15.1 33 3&#13;
18.7 344 12 D&#13;
18&#13;
1955&#13;
15.1 16.1&#13;
11.4 16.7 33 I&#13;
19&#13;
1928&#13;
1 5.0 1 7 .3&#13;
9.5 16.1 40 I&#13;
20&#13;
1923&#13;
14.9 22.3&#13;
17.6 25 3 15 D&#13;
21&#13;
1921&#13;
14.9 19.3&#13;
20.2 21.2 11 D&#13;
22&#13;
14.8 16.7&#13;
1931&#13;
12.8 18.9 23 I&#13;
23&#13;
193S&#13;
13.7 14.5&#13;
6.6 10.2 4 8 I&#13;
24&#13;
1903&#13;
13.6 18.1&#13;
17.4 17.4 16 D&#13;
25&#13;
1930&#13;
13.4 16.1&#13;
11.4 18.0 32 I&#13;
26&#13;
1943&#13;
12.9 15.3&#13;
16.4 18.0 1 8 D&#13;
27&#13;
1916&#13;
12.7 12.7&#13;
12.5 12.5 27 I&#13;
28&#13;
1936&#13;
12.6 14.8&#13;
13.0 15.3 22 D&#13;
29&#13;
1933&#13;
12.6 14 3&#13;
11.5 16.1 31 D&#13;
30&#13;
1958&#13;
11.3 15.6&#13;
6 .5 10.2 49 I&#13;
31&#13;
1940&#13;
11.2 12.7&#13;
9.4 12.7 41 I&#13;
32&#13;
1925&#13;
11.0 13.9&#13;
10.6 17.7 38 I&#13;
33&#13;
1924&#13;
10.9 17.8&#13;
12.6 15.5 25 D&#13;
34&#13;
1927&#13;
10.7 16.4&#13;
11.3 17.0 34 D&#13;
35&#13;
1942&#13;
10 .7 11.8&#13;
8.8 11.5 43 I&#13;
36&#13;
1941&#13;
10.6 14.5&#13;
12.6 17.0 24 D&#13;
37&#13;
1946&#13;
10.6 12 9&#13;
1 2.1 14.9 28 D&#13;
38&#13;
1939&#13;
10.6 12.3&#13;
11.3 13.3 35 D&#13;
39&#13;
1948&#13;
10.5 11.1&#13;
11.6 11.6 30 D&#13;
40&#13;
1959&#13;
10.4 13.7&#13;
6.0&#13;
9 .0 51 I&#13;
41&#13;
1909&#13;
10.0 10 0&#13;
15 4 17.9 19 D&#13;
42&#13;
1957&#13;
9.9· 11.3&#13;
7.4 12 3 46 I&#13;
43&#13;
1935&#13;
9.8&#13;
9.8&#13;
4 .8&#13;
7.3 52 I&#13;
44&#13;
1907&#13;
9.75 9.75&#13;
10.9 12.2 37 D&#13;
45&#13;
194 7&#13;
8 .8 11.8&#13;
10.6 12.7 39 D&#13;
46&#13;
1929&#13;
8.7 11.2&#13;
7 .8 13.8 45 I&#13;
47&#13;
1949&#13;
8.3 10.5&#13;
8 .0 11.4 44 I&#13;
48&#13;
1932&#13;
8 .1 11.2&#13;
8.9 11.1 42 D&#13;
49&#13;
7.8&#13;
1945&#13;
8.5&#13;
2.4&#13;
43 58 I&#13;
50&#13;
1960&#13;
7.7&#13;
9 .9&#13;
**&#13;
51&#13;
1912&#13;
7.4&#13;
9.0&#13;
11.8 11.8 29 D&#13;
52&#13;
1934&#13;
7.3&#13;
8.1&#13;
11.1 19.3 36 D&#13;
53&#13;
6.3&#13;
1953&#13;
8.5&#13;
2.9 6 .12 56 I&#13;
54&#13;
1956&#13;
5.2&#13;
9 .6&#13;
64&#13;
9.2 50 D&#13;
55&#13;
5.16 6.45&#13;
1944&#13;
2.6&#13;
3 .2 57 I&#13;
56&#13;
1954&#13;
4.3&#13;
6.4&#13;
4 .4&#13;
4 .6 53 D&#13;
57&#13;
1950&#13;
4.3 4 .85&#13;
3 .9&#13;
62 54 I&#13;
58&#13;
1951&#13;
4 .2&#13;
4.9&#13;
3.6 5.86 55 I&#13;
59&#13;
1952&#13;
3.7&#13;
5.2&#13;
6 .7 10.6 47 D&#13;
60&#13;
1937&#13;
2.02&#13;
4 .1&#13;
1.5&#13;
9 .0 59 I&#13;
Greatest percentage jump 1902 from 1 2.5 to 22.2&#13;
1904 from 14.3 to 23.8&#13;
1901 from 18.0 to 28.9&#13;
Largest number of contributors&#13;
LE ALL&#13;
1949&#13;
26&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
81&#13;
ALABAMA&#13;
1&#13;
ALASKA&#13;
1&#13;
ARIZONA&#13;
13&#13;
ARKANSAS&#13;
CALIFORNIA&#13;
73&#13;
COLOltADO&#13;
14&#13;
CONNECTICUT&#13;
4&#13;
DELAWARE&#13;
1&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
11&#13;
GEORGIA&#13;
2&#13;
HAWAII&#13;
4&#13;
IDAHO&#13;
1&#13;
ILLINOIS&#13;
48&#13;
I NDIANA&#13;
9&#13;
IOWA&#13;
225&#13;
KANSAS&#13;
10&#13;
KENTUCKY&#13;
4&#13;
LOUISIANA&#13;
1&#13;
MAINE&#13;
MARYLAND&#13;
5&#13;
MASSACHUSETTS&#13;
5&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
19&#13;
MINNESOTA&#13;
20&#13;
MISSISSIPPI&#13;
MISSOURI&#13;
5&#13;
MONTANA&#13;
4&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
25&#13;
NEVADA&#13;
1&#13;
NEW H AMPSHIRE&#13;
1&#13;
NEW JERSEY&#13;
17&#13;
NEW MEXICO&#13;
1&#13;
NEW YORK&#13;
19&#13;
NORTH CAROLINA&#13;
5&#13;
NORTH DAKOTA&#13;
2&#13;
OHIO&#13;
17&#13;
OKLAHOMA&#13;
1&#13;
6&#13;
OREGON&#13;
PENNSYLVANIA.&#13;
4&#13;
RHODE ISLAND&#13;
1&#13;
SOUTH CAROLINA&#13;
SOUTH DAKOTA&#13;
27&#13;
TENNESSEE&#13;
3&#13;
TEXAS&#13;
4&#13;
1&#13;
UTAH&#13;
1&#13;
VERMONT&#13;
4&#13;
VIRGINIA&#13;
WASHINGTON&#13;
6&#13;
WEST VIRGINIA&#13;
9&#13;
WISCONSI N&#13;
4&#13;
WYOMING&#13;
6&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C. 2&#13;
&#13;
101&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
728&#13;
&#13;
165&#13;
&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
214&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
13&#13;
1&#13;
79&#13;
18&#13;
4&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
1&#13;
56&#13;
10&#13;
273&#13;
10&#13;
8&#13;
3&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
24&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
4&#13;
29&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
17&#13;
2&#13;
22&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
26&#13;
1&#13;
7&#13;
7&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
979&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
�LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
AVERAGE LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
GIFT IS $13.18&#13;
The size of the average gift to Living Endowment for the fund year year ending&#13;
J uly 31, 1961 was $13.18 per person contributing.&#13;
638 is the number of contr ibutions and&#13;
does not represent the number of contributors, because of one contribution representing two alumni in many cases, and because the June Class of 1961 is fi gured as&#13;
one and not 107.&#13;
The total number of contr ibutors without the Senior class was 814. Below is a&#13;
breakdown of the 638 contr ibutions.&#13;
Si ze of&#13;
Contribut ion&#13;
$&#13;
&#13;
Where Hu sba nd a nd Wi fe Are&#13;
B oth Alum s, Gift is shown as&#13;
on e Contribution&#13;
In This&#13;
Breakdown&#13;
&#13;
.7 5&#13;
1.00&#13;
2.00&#13;
2 .5 0&#13;
3.00&#13;
4 .00&#13;
5.00&#13;
6.00&#13;
7.00&#13;
8.00&#13;
10.00&#13;
11.20&#13;
12.00&#13;
12.50&#13;
15.00&#13;
20.00&#13;
22. 00&#13;
21.00&#13;
25.00&#13;
29.00&#13;
30.00&#13;
35.00&#13;
40.00&#13;
50.00&#13;
70.00&#13;
75.00&#13;
78.00&#13;
100.00&#13;
200.00&#13;
&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
40&#13;
34&#13;
1&#13;
14&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
1 54&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
20 2&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
22&#13;
23&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
77&#13;
1&#13;
6&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
638&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GIVE $54,386.25&#13;
IN YEAR ENDING JULY 31&#13;
Morningside Alumni g ave $54,386.25 to&#13;
the Living Endowment Alumni Fund, the&#13;
MacCollin Organ fund, the Fine Arts&#13;
Building fund, operations, scholarships, endowment, Charles City College fund, and&#13;
the Class of 1908 Geology Fund in the&#13;
fiscal year ending July 3,1, 1961.&#13;
For this report all alumni giving has&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
been placed in two categories for figuring&#13;
class participation percentages.&#13;
One category is the Living Endowment&#13;
Alumni Fund. The other categor y is all&#13;
alumni giving including Living Endowment.&#13;
Class percentages are based on all graduate&#13;
and former student names on our current&#13;
mailing list. The percentages are figured&#13;
separately for Living Endowment and for&#13;
total Alumni giving.&#13;
In the case of husband and wife both&#13;
being alumni, and belonging to different&#13;
class years, credit is given to each for one&#13;
half the contribution.&#13;
A number following a name in the Living&#13;
Endowment fund list indicates the individual has contributed to the Living Endowment fund for that number of years. Numbers are used only for Living Endowment&#13;
and do not apply to "Other Giving". Five&#13;
year s total is the minimum number of&#13;
years noted. Consequently there are some&#13;
alumni in the "Other Giving" list without&#13;
a number after their name who have very&#13;
fine records of giving to Living Endowment and whose 60-61 contribution was&#13;
designated for a different fund.&#13;
All titles, as Doctor, Reverend, etc. have&#13;
been omi tted in the following lists.&#13;
&#13;
ABBY EASTER SEAL CHAIRMAN&#13;
Abigail Van Buren, "Dear Abby", is&#13;
National Chairman of the Easter Seal Campaign for 1962.&#13;
Author of the widely syndicated newspaper column "Dear Abby", she is Mrs.&#13;
Morton Phillips (Pauline Esther Friedman&#13;
40) . Abby is the donor of an annual&#13;
scholarship to a worthy Morningside student.&#13;
&#13;
ST AN GREIGG ELECTED TO&#13;
CITY COUNCIL&#13;
Stanley Greigg '54, Dean of Men and&#13;
instructor in history at Morningside College&#13;
was elected in November, to the five member City Council of Sioux City. Sioux City&#13;
operates under the city manager type of&#13;
government. He will ser ve a four year&#13;
term .&#13;
&#13;
�LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
1890's&#13;
Emma Petersmier Cook 7&#13;
Frank W. Mitchell&#13;
W . B. Empey 12&#13;
1902&#13;
Guy B. Frary 6&#13;
Ethel Walker Trimble Loftus&#13;
1903&#13;
Hiram Ellis&#13;
A. R. Toothaker 5&#13;
Flora Dunlap Tiss&#13;
1904&#13;
R. D. Acheson&#13;
J. Ralph Magee&#13;
Mabel Killam Maynard&#13;
18&#13;
Fred B. Williams&#13;
F. Stanley Carson&#13;
1905&#13;
Myrtilla Cook L e wis 19&#13;
Pearl Boddy McKercher&#13;
Coralinn&#13;
Lockin Miller&#13;
Mrs. E. C. Richards 10&#13;
Walter Sloan 10&#13;
Mrs. Virginia Fair Trimble&#13;
5&#13;
Emma Fair Young 12&#13;
1906&#13;
0. M. Foote 16&#13;
Elizabeth E. Johnson 10&#13;
Gertrude Crossan Kindig&#13;
6&#13;
R. G lenn Hinkle r 10&#13;
1907&#13;
Ella Dickson Blacks hire&#13;
Genevieve Howard Haves 10&#13;
Mabel Haskins Maynard&#13;
Mabel Vesta Towner 10&#13;
1908&#13;
Lura Matteson Ande rson 16&#13;
Thomas C. Anderson 16&#13;
H . J . Richards&#13;
Emma Cain Russell 1 3&#13;
H. H. Sawyer 7&#13;
1909&#13;
Arthur R. Bastian 8&#13;
ldabelle Lewis Main 7&#13;
Alvah Miller&#13;
14&#13;
Julia Royse&#13;
1910&#13;
J. H. Bridenbaug h 18&#13;
Irvin Engle&#13;
May Wood Kixmiller&#13;
Evelyn Denkmen Lester&#13;
D. P. Shull 6&#13;
1911&#13;
Mabel McCreery&#13;
Becker&#13;
J . H . Berkstresser 7&#13;
Jennie Nelson Bridenbaugh&#13;
18&#13;
F. H . Chandler&#13;
Frances Horn Chandler&#13;
Bessie A. Dunbar&#13;
Hazel Deno Horton&#13;
H H. Hudson 15&#13;
Vivian McFarland McGee 6&#13;
Edna E. Randolph 11&#13;
Maria Wiese&#13;
1912&#13;
Roscoe H. Carter&#13;
Florence Brown Clark&#13;
W. E. Ellison 6&#13;
Florence Anthony Griffen&#13;
George Wickens 6&#13;
1913&#13;
Ella S. Campbell 15&#13;
Harry A . Chipman 5&#13;
J. H. Edge&#13;
William C. Evans&#13;
16&#13;
Lavancha Marie&#13;
Wood Green 6&#13;
Hazel Shumasker Hudson&#13;
15&#13;
Florence Montgomery Kingsbury 9&#13;
Horace B. Merten&#13;
Eva Lezar Potter 7&#13;
John Ralston 13&#13;
&#13;
Jean Whittemore Reynolds&#13;
Anna Rieke 9&#13;
Catherine Elliott&#13;
Sayer 15&#13;
Leroy B. Scott 12&#13;
Helen W edgwood 18&#13;
1914&#13;
Mitchell B. B ri ggs l1&#13;
Juanita Walker Buchman 7&#13;
Lucille Morgan Coombs 20&#13;
C laudia Armbright&#13;
Engle&#13;
Myron Insko 19&#13;
Alice Klippel 12&#13;
John Kolp 8&#13;
Laura Postin Sanborn&#13;
18&#13;
Fred Schriever 19&#13;
Ali ce Thornburg Sm it h&#13;
Alice Dewey Vennink&#13;
7&#13;
1915&#13;
Olive Jones Bleam&#13;
19&#13;
J. L. B ridenbaugh 13&#13;
Mabel Irwin Burgess 15&#13;
Dora Carl son Cervin&#13;
14&#13;
Marie Dewitt Deffenbaugh 11&#13;
James I. Dolliver 16&#13;
William E . Drury&#13;
H. L. Dunham 20&#13;
Mabel King Greening&#13;
9&#13;
Joseph D. Hale&#13;
Ethe l Collier Hawley 8&#13;
Allan B. Klie n 7&#13;
W. H. Payne G&#13;
Ralph Prichard&#13;
11&#13;
Carl W. Sass 17&#13;
Bonnie Robinson Schoonover 9&#13;
Cyril U pha m&#13;
Robert R. Vernon 20&#13;
1916&#13;
F. Earl Burgess 1 5&#13;
Loi s M. Crouch&#13;
Oscar I. Hall&#13;
Leslie B. Logan 7&#13;
G. B. Patrick 19&#13;
Katherine&#13;
Gow Swanson&#13;
Mary Wedgwood 16&#13;
1917&#13;
Dorothy&#13;
Steele Apland 5&#13;
Clara Swain Dailey&#13;
Cornelia McBurney French&#13;
Anna Ande rson H ayes&#13;
Marie Sebern Kolp 8&#13;
Mae Wickens Nettleton&#13;
Gailord S. Ome r&#13;
Neva Hawk Ralston 13&#13;
Fern Beache m Reynolds&#13;
Millie Corneliussen Robertson&#13;
5&#13;
Dona ld Walton 20&#13;
Ruth Gillie Warnes&#13;
1918&#13;
G. E. Barks 20&#13;
Clara Lewis Berkstresser 7&#13;
J. Finley Christ&#13;
7&#13;
Horace D eWalt 9&#13;
Frances Kolp Gingles&#13;
13&#13;
Hazel Barrow Ha r t 20&#13;
Agnes Mae Fry Holdren&#13;
K athinca Nielson Kingsbury 20&#13;
Alcie Miller Lindh or st 15&#13;
Marian Johnson Rieke 10&#13;
&#13;
William T. Warnes&#13;
&#13;
Rerbetta Bixby Yo ung&#13;
1919&#13;
Beulah Edginton&#13;
9&#13;
Ruth Reid Griffith 8&#13;
Fern McKinney Hinkle 10&#13;
F. A. Kingsbury&#13;
20&#13;
gertrude&#13;
Dykstra Kolberg&#13;
Agnes M. McCreery&#13;
Lena McDonald&#13;
12&#13;
Dorothy Owen McKay&#13;
7&#13;
Lois Knapp Nelson&#13;
E. M. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Miriam&#13;
&#13;
Fish&#13;
&#13;
Wassenaar&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
Evan Ausman&#13;
Axel J. B eck&#13;
&#13;
Eva Treman&#13;
&#13;
Cary&#13;
&#13;
Martha&#13;
&#13;
Christ 20&#13;
Dragoo 8&#13;
Orin D . Goodrich&#13;
Verle A. Hart 20&#13;
Amos W. Hart man&#13;
Wayne R. Hilmer 16&#13;
Gladys Knapp Luse&#13;
John H. McBurney&#13;
Leland P. Sutherland 11&#13;
1921&#13;
George I. Back&#13;
Beatrice Bond&#13;
Floyd A. Conne r 9&#13;
Arthur J. Coombs 20&#13;
Loren e Williams DeWitt 5&#13;
George Dunn 6&#13;
John Erwin Felle r 9&#13;
Harold R. Hartley&#13;
Elsie E. L a n g&#13;
Esther Goods ite Levin&#13;
Adelia Hill MacBeth&#13;
Gladys Armbright Scheffel&#13;
Russell R. S mit h&#13;
Evelyn Balkema Troutman&#13;
B ess ie R eed Walton&#13;
20&#13;
Harry E. Whyte&#13;
11&#13;
1922&#13;
Minnie C. Ander son 17&#13;
Harry E. Benz 20&#13;
Mary Decker Benz 20&#13;
&#13;
Lavina&#13;
&#13;
Elsiee&#13;
&#13;
Bennington Conner&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Leon E. Hickman 20&#13;
Iris Knight&#13;
Gladys Bradley McBurney&#13;
Zelda Bond McNall y&#13;
Ma bel Rutledge Morsch&#13;
Edna&#13;
Bekins Moorhead&#13;
18&#13;
18&#13;
Park W . Moorhead&#13;
Golda Kane Moser&#13;
16&#13;
Don N issen 14&#13;
E. F. Rankin&#13;
&#13;
L l oyd&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Lydia&#13;
&#13;
Scheerer&#13;
Acklin Scheerer&#13;
Wedgwood&#13;
14&#13;
Bixby young&#13;
1923&#13;
Gertrude&#13;
OverackerCarter&#13;
Genevieve Stamper C line 20&#13;
Helen Graef Cobb&#13;
Roy Cox 5&#13;
Ruth Lindsay Cox 5&#13;
Cecil W . Derivan G&#13;
Evelyn Stollard Hartley&#13;
Vesta Taylor Ketels 17&#13;
B. 0. L yle 8&#13;
Esther Waterhouse&#13;
Parson 1 8&#13;
Fred B. Smith 5&#13;
Happie E. Smith&#13;
5&#13;
Glen Weldon&#13;
Luci lle Vi cker s 15&#13;
1924&#13;
Margaret&#13;
Ellis Crown&#13;
Paul C. Ellis&#13;
Ray C. Hawley&#13;
Mayme Hoyt Hickman&#13;
20&#13;
H. E. Hutchins on (Hon)&#13;
7&#13;
Paul E. McMaster&#13;
Paul A . Moody&#13;
Josephine Steele Pecaut 11&#13;
Russell B. Pecaut&#13;
11&#13;
Annette M. Sheel&#13;
Irene Truckenmiller&#13;
&#13;
1925&#13;
Lester Benz 18&#13;
Marguerite&#13;
Held Benz&#13;
Viola Benz 19&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
�LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
Paul Coombs 6&#13;
Sarah Drewry Coombs 6&#13;
Haze l L owry Funkhouser 6&#13;
Kenneth Funkhouser&#13;
6&#13;
Rex Fountain&#13;
A. A. Johnson&#13;
Helen Surber Johnson&#13;
Max Kopstein 19&#13;
Miriam KAmphoefner Larson&#13;
Hugh Marsh&#13;
Wilma Trumbull 10&#13;
Alice Robbins Wicke ns 6&#13;
Mildred Torbert Leamer 6&#13;
1926&#13;
Gertrude Rawson Brinkman&#13;
Kenneth C. Chinn 5&#13;
Margaret Coleman C ra ry&#13;
Charles&#13;
Emer son 13&#13;
Ida Bryan Forbes&#13;
Doris Giehm Fountain&#13;
Mrs. Clyde R. Griffen&#13;
Kenneth R. Hall 10&#13;
Earl E. Josten&#13;
18&#13;
Frank Leamer&#13;
6&#13;
Lucille Lingaard Marsh&#13;
Harvey Peterson&#13;
Joy L. Smith&#13;
Homer Smothers&#13;
Mrs. L avinia Smothers&#13;
Forest Mosier TePaske 1 8&#13;
H enry J. T ePaske 18&#13;
Margaret T iedeman 13&#13;
Page Lohman Watson&#13;
Henry D. Wright&#13;
Mabel Hartley Zwald 16&#13;
&#13;
1927&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Seward Anderson&#13;
Charles W. Bach&#13;
Robert R. Barnard 1 1&#13;
Lenore B en edict Blythe&#13;
Claire M ilne Britten&#13;
Orph a Kudrle DeMots 11&#13;
J. C. Ducommun 20&#13;
Mae Asmu ssen Hall 10&#13;
Mabel Hoyt 6&#13;
Margaret McIntos h Hunt 1 8&#13;
Judson Large&#13;
Bernitas Wolle Lynk&#13;
Irwin Miller&#13;
·&#13;
Lone lle Bushnell Wright&#13;
Zola Bucher S mith 5&#13;
1928&#13;
Earl J. Benz&#13;
O. W. Brand 5&#13;
Claude Brown 6&#13;
Lawrence Cain&#13;
Ralph Eberly&#13;
Florence Spencer Forchtner&#13;
A. M. Forsberg&#13;
Mrs. M. E. Graber&#13;
Max Hughes 8&#13;
Mabel Nissen Haas&#13;
Julia La Grone 11&#13;
Horace Koch&#13;
Mabel Orvig Littl e&#13;
Helen Tiedema n McDonald&#13;
Anna Mae Hurlbut Mathre&#13;
Ruth Pattison Nea l&#13;
Neva Crews Shellenberger&#13;
Mildred Sweet&#13;
Hal T homas&#13;
William Van Schreven&#13;
&#13;
1929&#13;
&#13;
D erwood A. Beck&#13;
Dorothy Bogen&#13;
Hazel Surber Cr oston 6&#13;
Lyle D. Culve r&#13;
Ann a Be r ger Gourley&#13;
Dale F . Gr aber&#13;
Anne Aalfs Sch aaf 20&#13;
Margaret De Witt Smith&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Gail Smith&#13;
Elizabeth Turner&#13;
C. B. Vizas 5&#13;
Elva Reimers Wala lce 5&#13;
Merwin Zwald 16&#13;
Ru t h Schule r Stewart 9&#13;
1930&#13;
Harold B artz&#13;
Margaret Quirin Bartz&#13;
Donald C. B rodie&#13;
Richard Carlyon&#13;
Louis H. Croston 6&#13;
William B. Danforth&#13;
Mrs. John Erickson&#13;
Ardins Bergeson Gilbert&#13;
Nath an Goldberg&#13;
Margaret King Hilburn&#13;
Harold B . Johnson&#13;
Burdella Asmus Litz 11&#13;
Wallace Lowry&#13;
Hazel Elliff McVey&#13;
Fay Moeller 5&#13;
Eleanor Sterling Robertson&#13;
E. H e nry Running&#13;
Thelma Jager&#13;
Schaper 15&#13;
Victor Schuldt&#13;
Carol Larsen Sh afer&#13;
Gla dys Erickson Thorsheim&#13;
1931&#13;
Dorothy Anderson Ahrens&#13;
Lois Boyer Beam&#13;
Margaret Gray Benson&#13;
Inez Waterman Callahan&#13;
Joseph H. Castle 6&#13;
Mabel Springer Castle 6&#13;
Genevieve Metcalf D a nforth&#13;
Florence Down&#13;
Arthur Foreman&#13;
Helen Pa rrot Foreman&#13;
Neuma n L. G runstad 7&#13;
H. Milo Hall&#13;
Carl Linden&#13;
Muriel Harrington Moore&#13;
Robert Munger 18&#13;
E ldred L. Raun&#13;
Wendell B. Seward 19&#13;
Edward H. Sibley 5&#13;
Gladys Lopan Treptow&#13;
Nellie Ch ilton Va n Wyngarden 10&#13;
Virgil K. Williams 11&#13;
Inez A rche r Wolz&#13;
Opan Van Dyke Van Schreven&#13;
&#13;
1932&#13;
&#13;
Norman Barke r&#13;
June Bonderson Brainard&#13;
Lucilie Bryan&#13;
Mar vin Burgess 10&#13;
Helen Down Carson&#13;
D. George Davies 6&#13;
Mary Elizabeth Baker DeGarmo&#13;
Edgar J. Otto&#13;
Joyce Woodford Ramsey&#13;
Homer Sch aper 15&#13;
Robert D. Thomas 6&#13;
Nich olas Tiedeman&#13;
Arthur Van Wyngarden&#13;
10&#13;
1933&#13;
Rich ard Aeck&#13;
Katherine C. Blazer&#13;
Janice Hagy Coffie&#13;
Lois Crane 5&#13;
Wayne E. Dennis&#13;
William Drommer&#13;
Virginia H unter Gaspar&#13;
Roe ne Brooks Horgan 5&#13;
Maude Kusia n Louk&#13;
Ruth McDonald 16&#13;
Muriel Bathoo Nash 5&#13;
Louise McCracken Paulson 15&#13;
Ruth H ulse Schuldt&#13;
Frances Figert Skinne r&#13;
&#13;
Kenne th T . Wilcox&#13;
1934&#13;
Verl Crow&#13;
Harold Decker&#13;
Helen e Crenshaw Decker&#13;
John E. Evans 8&#13;
John E. Griffen 6&#13;
Gleva Binger Hansen&#13;
Audrey Stromberg Kolbe&#13;
Alice Morrison Norwood&#13;
Lucille Henderson Parry&#13;
1935&#13;
Anthony Blankers 13&#13;
Elizabeth Bliss&#13;
Charles W. Corkhill 9&#13;
Jas. J . D eRoos&#13;
Dorothy Hopkinson Drommer&#13;
Frank E. G ibbs 7&#13;
Eth el Hendenbergh 17&#13;
Helen Brodie Johnston&#13;
Lillia n Hyde Jones&#13;
F. Merlin Kolbe&#13;
Laird Loveland&#13;
Jason L. Saunderson&#13;
Marcella Locke Shultz&#13;
James L. Wilfong&#13;
1936&#13;
Eleanor Taft Allen&#13;
Julia Beresk in&#13;
Nema W esner Davies 6&#13;
Jennie Williams DeRoos&#13;
Max Gaspar&#13;
Laurie Gillespie&#13;
0. B. K e iser&#13;
Esther White Kindig&#13;
Marvin J. Klass 10&#13;
L. V. Kuhl&#13;
Margaret Mesing Larsen 16&#13;
John Lindblade&#13;
Winona E . Lohff&#13;
lO&#13;
Willis Phelps&#13;
6&#13;
William Rose&#13;
Beverly Wertz Sm it h&#13;
Mildred Mouw Walke r&#13;
&#13;
1937&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude E . Bale 10&#13;
Harold Dayton&#13;
Pe arl Wagner&#13;
1938&#13;
Francis Bakken 6&#13;
Vera Hayes Campbell 7&#13;
Wilfred Crabb&#13;
Mrs. Louis Goldber g&#13;
Russell Guster&#13;
Robert J. Hilke r 8&#13;
Rowena Bennett H urlburt&#13;
Margaret Lease 15&#13;
Frank Logan&#13;
Anita Haafke Marlowe&#13;
Edgar McCracken 6&#13;
Kenneth E. Metcalf 8&#13;
Olsen&#13;
Walter&#13;
James C. Olson&#13;
Lyle Poyzer&#13;
Mildred Eubank Vasey&#13;
7&#13;
1939&#13;
Albe rta Seavey Anthony 17&#13;
Cl ement E . Baldwin&#13;
Norman K. Brady&#13;
A. W. Buckingham&#13;
Carol Held Burr&#13;
Ruth Worrell Clayton&#13;
12&#13;
Ch arl es C. Howard&#13;
Virginia Smith McLain&#13;
Helen Pearson McCracken 6&#13;
Verna Brown Phelps 6&#13;
Ron Rawson 11&#13;
M. Dale Rogers 5&#13;
Virginia Thomas&#13;
1940&#13;
B. Roy Brown&#13;
&#13;
�LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
Leona Kecker Crabb&#13;
Deane R. Flett&#13;
Eleanor Jones 11&#13;
Esther Friedman Lederer&#13;
7&#13;
Margaret Gusteson Loettrle&#13;
Kathryn Kolp Menke&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
Anne Larsen Olsen&#13;
Pauline Friedman Phillips 14&#13;
Robert Ruleman 16&#13;
Millicent Jensen Saunderson&#13;
Alfred P . Strozdas&#13;
Bruce Van D e Mark 14&#13;
Vera Farrington Olson&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Clayton&#13;
Virginia Davi s Coughenour&#13;
Ruth Olsen Granstrom&#13;
Rolland Grefe 10&#13;
Dale M. Harter&#13;
Miriam Hartley&#13;
19&#13;
Frances Forsbe rg Keiser&#13;
Richard V. King&#13;
Ila Eberly Lindsay&#13;
William Bruce Lindsay&#13;
Mary Hinchman Mohr&#13;
Alice Swanson Otto&#13;
Lillian Pickersgill&#13;
8&#13;
Max H. Stern 8&#13;
Charles Wert&#13;
Anna Zenkovich&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
H elen Haffits Behar&#13;
Norm a n Cla rk S&#13;
Joy Momsen Corkhill 9&#13;
Frank Curry&#13;
H a rvey Durfey&#13;
Mary A. Fiddick&#13;
11&#13;
Helen Meredith&#13;
Haala nd&#13;
Dal e Harris&#13;
Ma rjorie Walton Hi edeman&#13;
Andrew Cyril John son 5&#13;
Stan Newman 5&#13;
D oro t hv Ann Clem Otte n&#13;
A nne Madison Wallace 7&#13;
Ch a rl es Q . Wa ll ace 7&#13;
Dwight Ebelheiser&#13;
&#13;
1951.&#13;
&#13;
Jean Smith Baldner&#13;
Carol yn Held D a vies&#13;
H e rschel J . Evans&#13;
Lyle Fi tzge ra ld&#13;
Virginia Coo k Fritz 5&#13;
Doris Leivestadt&#13;
Gist&#13;
Warren H eld&#13;
Joan B eckett Jacobs&#13;
Don McCa rthy&#13;
0. Nels on Pri ce&#13;
Clair C. Scott 5&#13;
B e ve rl y Spielman&#13;
Darrel Warner&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
1943&#13;
&#13;
Francis L. Brockman 8&#13;
Demetra Gearas Constantine&#13;
11&#13;
Mary Cruikshank Grefe 10&#13;
Mariellen Rifenbark Johnson&#13;
L. E. Jones&#13;
Francis A. Kingsbury&#13;
1.6&#13;
Helen Anderson Leopold&#13;
John Payne 10&#13;
Wilson B. Reynolds&#13;
Jeane Runge&#13;
Robert F. Sharp&#13;
Clarence Ver Steeg 7&#13;
Dorothy DeVries Ver Steeg 7&#13;
Louise Madis on Walter&#13;
Dan Wertz&#13;
Ellen White&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
1945&#13;
&#13;
Dua n e T ay lor&#13;
Jan MacCollin Taylor&#13;
E lea nor Bridenba u gh Watson&#13;
Willia m D. W oll e 9&#13;
Rich a rd Youngstrom&#13;
Raly Wallace&#13;
Roy H . Moore&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Ernst Baer 9&#13;
Bonita Hahn Bottolfson&#13;
Evelyn Madsen Held&#13;
&#13;
1946&#13;
David Cox l1&#13;
Loren Gast&#13;
Lois Emm e Green&#13;
6&#13;
Ruth Elliott Jones&#13;
Lyle Knudsen&#13;
Berton A . Kolp&#13;
Robert Haitz Kolp&#13;
don L eopold&#13;
Pearl Manz&#13;
Char les Obye 9&#13;
Payricia Linds a y Parsons&#13;
Robert J. P a r sons&#13;
Coila Si eber 11&#13;
Theodore Whicher&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Schra de r D a y 5&#13;
Robert Eidsmoe&#13;
Robert Fritz 5&#13;
Eda len e Moone McCarthy&#13;
Charles McNutt&#13;
8&#13;
E a rl E. Smith&#13;
Don a ld L. Strandburg 6&#13;
6&#13;
Patricia Pentony Strandburg&#13;
JoAnn Booker Sully&#13;
Doro t h y Sull en ger Whitehou se&#13;
&#13;
Marilyn McDougal Burnham&#13;
Mary Lou Schultz Buse&#13;
Carol yn Wolle Cox 11&#13;
Darlene Held Harris&#13;
Lamar Jones&#13;
Wilfred Kaufman&#13;
W. J. Knupp&#13;
Norm Mathers&#13;
Katherine&#13;
Roadman&#13;
McLaughlin 13&#13;
Richard McLaughlin 13&#13;
Ada Suttie&#13;
Harriet Baker Wood&#13;
&#13;
Stanley E . Anderson 15&#13;
Robert W. Bennett&#13;
Kahtryn Brown Bennett&#13;
Arthur Bona th&#13;
Marion Miller Buckingham&#13;
Charles B. Clayton 12&#13;
Daryle Crabb&#13;
Kay Madison Crabb&#13;
J . L. M. DeGarmo&#13;
Bernard Feikema&#13;
7&#13;
M. L. Granstrom&#13;
Raymond Gusteson&#13;
20&#13;
Jean Lafoon 8&#13;
Mildred Pfeiffer&#13;
18&#13;
Leslie L. Pruehs 12&#13;
George R. Pullman 6&#13;
Alice E. Spalding&#13;
Lucille Mathena Wert&#13;
Geraldine Thomas Whicher&#13;
&#13;
Doro t hy Wells Andrews&#13;
6&#13;
Sally Arthur Bohner&#13;
Mary Louis e H eld Feikema&#13;
Ivan Gosoo&#13;
William C. Mille r&#13;
Fern Dunn Obye 9&#13;
Frances Bridge Schinkel&#13;
Hope Faul Schlenger&#13;
&#13;
Ellen Westergaard&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Robert D. Jackson&#13;
Edward Jacobs&#13;
Warren John son&#13;
Vernice Christiansen&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
16&#13;
Warren Moore&#13;
Lyle A. Rachu y 5&#13;
Harrie t Keith Schlicting&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Marie Wenger Albertson&#13;
Margaret Barks&#13;
7&#13;
Beverly John s on B ooth&#13;
Muriel Lambert Briggs 5&#13;
William E. Briggs 5&#13;
Darlene Taylor Carman&#13;
Claud e Davis 5&#13;
Euni ce Bru ce Duxbury&#13;
Donald Fountain&#13;
Mrs. Henry Glover&#13;
(Lola Graham)&#13;
Harley Gran t ham&#13;
Tom Green 6&#13;
Ruth Brenner Hazen&#13;
Mrs. Darlyne Schwendermann&#13;
Hobson&#13;
Feldman F. Jones 11&#13;
Patricia Foulke Kaufman&#13;
LaVonne Harms Linder 6&#13;
Paul Ralston&#13;
William B. Seibert&#13;
Darwyn&#13;
Snyder&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Edna Trevor Daniels 7&#13;
Merlin C. Davies&#13;
Jack C. F essenden&#13;
Donald E. Fisch e r&#13;
Richard G. Force&#13;
Carol Corrie Fountain&#13;
Clarice Moone Hammerstrom&#13;
Howard Harmon&#13;
Robe rt L. Hazen&#13;
Dale Hi ede man&#13;
Hubert Jerman&#13;
Don K elsey&#13;
Clifford L ewe llyn&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
P . McLaughlin&#13;
Arlon Rader Malcom&#13;
Burton A. Passer 5&#13;
Glen E. Pome roy 8&#13;
Kenneth B. Scott&#13;
Joan Meyer Snyder&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Iris Mae Lintner Bjork&#13;
Dona ld L. Carver&#13;
June Mousely Carver&#13;
De rrell D. D ow&#13;
Denni s Dow&#13;
All een Lindquist Fraser&#13;
Joan Collin Fri es&#13;
Doroth y Gondrin ge r&#13;
D onald B. Krone&#13;
Josephine Sun Ku&#13;
W. G. Nelson&#13;
Carlton L. Peterson&#13;
Patricia&#13;
McBurney Robinson&#13;
Irwin Sutherland&#13;
Ann H ackney Suthe rla nd&#13;
Dave Wallery&#13;
James L. Whitehouse&#13;
Nancy Cline Youds&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
B. Fra ser&#13;
Ve rlin Heuton&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Irving Jensen&#13;
8&#13;
B en Storek&#13;
F ranklin L . Tepner&#13;
Alice Suzuki Yamada&#13;
&#13;
1955&#13;
&#13;
Loren Anderson&#13;
W esley B oldt&#13;
Mrs. Glenn Bushyager&#13;
7&#13;
Blaine H. Ga rl ow&#13;
Sha r on T a yl or Held&#13;
Dr. Edwin Hirsch (Hon)&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
�LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
Curtis G. Love lace&#13;
Esther Little MacFarlane&#13;
Robert B. Mille r&#13;
Donald G. Murray&#13;
Donald W. Pa lme r 8&#13;
Joanne Preul&#13;
Mrs. Hilda Servisson&#13;
Donna Saupe Tarnos ky 5&#13;
&#13;
1956&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Goodwin Cline&#13;
Gordon Dodge&#13;
Donald D. Eilers&#13;
Mary Ann Hoffman&#13;
Cesar Lay&#13;
Kathryn Fristad Rasmus&#13;
&#13;
1957&#13;
&#13;
Hollister Cline&#13;
Karan Gay Davies&#13;
Joanne Hicklin Dierking&#13;
Kenneth Elvick&#13;
Martha Ann Matson Erickson&#13;
Mariltn Menter Garred&#13;
John Groethe&#13;
Beverly Giehm Hall&#13;
Jack Hall&#13;
William Lo&#13;
Dorothy Guyett Lohrman&#13;
Richard Metcalf&#13;
Patricia&#13;
Moorhead&#13;
Tiemans&#13;
Robert K. Tiemans&#13;
&#13;
1958&#13;
&#13;
Everett C. Ball&#13;
Kenneth Beenken&#13;
David H . Bogue 5&#13;
Delos Corderman&#13;
Paul Di erking&#13;
Charles F. Ellison&#13;
Sandra Maddison Hawk&#13;
Virgil Ma uer&#13;
Mrs. Virgil Mauer&#13;
Dixie Kirkhart Metcalf&#13;
Darlene Froelich Miller&#13;
Marjorie Rowla,nds Peterson&#13;
Roy Peterson&#13;
Joyce Elaine Arnold Sievers&#13;
Thomas Tooey&#13;
Alvin Trucano&#13;
&#13;
1959&#13;
&#13;
Allan Biesemeyer&#13;
Connie Davies Biesemeyer&#13;
Mervyn Cowling&#13;
Gordon W. Fountain&#13;
Esme Franzen&#13;
Karen Han se n&#13;
Janice&#13;
Elze Hass&#13;
Roger L eroy Hass&#13;
Jane Arnold Heikens&#13;
Stanley Heikens&#13;
Karen Kay Johnson Hyde&#13;
Cha rlotte A. Johnson&#13;
Maxine Law&#13;
Anita Kalskett Moorhead&#13;
Don Veghlan&#13;
Nancy Crary Veghlan&#13;
G lenna Wardlowe&#13;
Mrs. John Weisensee&#13;
Natalie Whitnev&#13;
&#13;
1960&#13;
&#13;
Leone Berkenpas Eidsmoe&#13;
Mrs. J. A. Hilts&#13;
Katherine Marjorwicz&#13;
Leverenz&#13;
Robert Leverenz&#13;
Harold Poppen&#13;
Gladys V. Powers&#13;
William B. Ridout&#13;
K e it h Rundell&#13;
.J oa nne Schne ll&#13;
W. Wa llace Spiegel&#13;
Sand ra P a trick Cope&#13;
Mrs. Elmer&#13;
&#13;
36&#13;
&#13;
1961&#13;
&#13;
Mack lin&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Mary E. Rice&#13;
Lamar Cope&#13;
June Class of 1961&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Wedgwood&#13;
Nellie Carpenter Winter&#13;
Lydia Bixby Young&#13;
&#13;
Carol&#13;
&#13;
Alice Bushnell Down&#13;
Vera Hatfield Gerkin&#13;
Cornelia Lueder Johnson&#13;
G. S. Nichols&#13;
Minnie C. Oates&#13;
Ernest M. Raun&#13;
Leroy Rowse&#13;
&#13;
1962&#13;
&#13;
Higgins Ridout&#13;
&#13;
CONTRIBUTIONS OTHER&#13;
THAN LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
&#13;
1903&#13;
&#13;
Daniel Starch&#13;
&#13;
1905&#13;
&#13;
Luella Marquardt&#13;
&#13;
1906&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude&#13;
Crossan Kindig&#13;
Heiman Van Dyke&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
&#13;
Ella Dickson Blackshire&#13;
Mabel Vesta Towner&#13;
&#13;
1908&#13;
&#13;
Lura Matteson Anderson&#13;
Thomas C. Anderson&#13;
A. G. Cushma n&#13;
Florence&#13;
Clark Heilman&#13;
Frank Heilman&#13;
Ethel Haskins Mahoney&#13;
D eLoss P . Shull&#13;
&#13;
1911&#13;
&#13;
Edna E. Randolph&#13;
Cora McKellip Sharman&#13;
Maria Wiese&#13;
&#13;
1912&#13;
&#13;
D. P . Mahoney&#13;
&#13;
1913&#13;
&#13;
Harry A. Chipman&#13;
Eva L eazer Potter&#13;
George W. Prichard&#13;
John Ralston&#13;
Lura Stonebraker&#13;
Helen Wedgwood&#13;
Cora Hayden Winterringer&#13;
Henry Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
1914&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Morgan Coombs&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
Charles Berkstresser&#13;
Mabel Irwin Burgess&#13;
Carl W. Sass&#13;
Ertel Stonebraker&#13;
Cyril Upham&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
F. Earl Burgess&#13;
Lois M. Cr o uch&#13;
Mary Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
Corne lia McBurney French&#13;
Ray Harrington&#13;
Marie Sebern Kolp&#13;
Minnie F rv McBride&#13;
Neva Hauk Ralston&#13;
Fern Beachem Reynolds&#13;
&#13;
1918&#13;
&#13;
G . E. Barks&#13;
Bernard B r own&#13;
Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
Mar tha Christ&#13;
&#13;
1921&#13;
&#13;
Arthur J. Coombs&#13;
Howard Down&#13;
Virgil Gerkin&#13;
Ethel Thompson&#13;
Kucinski&#13;
Harry E. Whyte&#13;
Ida Willcutt Wilson&#13;
Ron Wilson&#13;
&#13;
1922&#13;
Ira Gw inn&#13;
Leon E . Hickman&#13;
A. Q. Johnson&#13;
Sherman&#13;
McKinley, Jr.&#13;
Don Nissen&#13;
&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
1924&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Haradon Eerkes&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Ruth Berner Hauff&#13;
Mayme Hoyt Hickman&#13;
Ray Olson&#13;
George Paradise&#13;
Josephine Steele Pecant&#13;
Russell B. Pecaut&#13;
Muriel D eWitt Rowse&#13;
&#13;
1925&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite H eld Benz&#13;
Lester Benz&#13;
Viola Benz&#13;
Kenneth Funkhouser&#13;
Hazel Lowry Funkhouser&#13;
Emily Linden&#13;
Bernice Trindle McCoy&#13;
Elaine Barnt Rogers&#13;
Fred Share&#13;
&#13;
1926&#13;
&#13;
Ione Lease&#13;
Margaret&#13;
Spencer Rogers&#13;
Ruth Gilbert Burnett&#13;
&#13;
1927&#13;
&#13;
Paul Beck&#13;
Milo Bergeson&#13;
Merrill B urnett&#13;
J. C. Ducommun&#13;
Robert Hol comb&#13;
Mabel Hoyt&#13;
Lois Little&#13;
Margare t McCoy&#13;
Ray Rodeen&#13;
N . E. Williams&#13;
&#13;
1928&#13;
&#13;
Ru t h Gauger Furrow&#13;
Dwight Hauff&#13;
Julia La Grone&#13;
C. C. Maddison&#13;
&#13;
1929&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Su rbe r Croston&#13;
Ruth Frum&#13;
Ela Reime rs Wallace&#13;
Thelma Whitford&#13;
Kris tine Kucins ki Whitney&#13;
Margaret&#13;
Chesterman&#13;
Overgaard&#13;
&#13;
1930&#13;
&#13;
Gordon Crary&#13;
Lowell Crippen&#13;
Louis Croston&#13;
William B. Danforth&#13;
Dean Gree n&#13;
Lucille Claerbout&#13;
McGregor&#13;
Eleanor Sterling Robertson&#13;
&#13;
1931&#13;
&#13;
Gen evieve Metcalf&#13;
Nora Kru se&#13;
Wayne Menter&#13;
Edward H . Sibl ey&#13;
&#13;
1932&#13;
&#13;
Danforth&#13;
&#13;
David C. Carver&#13;
Grace Gordon Hatt&#13;
Har vey Nelson&#13;
Harvey&#13;
Pottoff&#13;
Home r Sch aper&#13;
Margaret Propp Thompson&#13;
&#13;
1933&#13;
&#13;
Walter Britten&#13;
William Drommer&#13;
&#13;
�Clara Bergman&#13;
&#13;
1934&#13;
&#13;
Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Adel ine Hall Anderle&#13;
Harold Decker&#13;
Helene Crenshaw Decker&#13;
John E. Griffen&#13;
Audrey Stromberg Kolbe&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Brown&#13;
Dorothy Sorenson Clark&#13;
Miles Tommeraasen&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
1935&#13;
&#13;
Harold Bomgaars&#13;
Mary Louie Held&#13;
Robert L. Frakes&#13;
Fern Dunn Obye&#13;
&#13;
1936&#13;
&#13;
Lois McCallum Hopkins&#13;
Edward Jacobs&#13;
&#13;
1937&#13;
&#13;
Audrey Hugh es Goodrich&#13;
Guy Nettleton&#13;
Charles Obye&#13;
Maynard Porter&#13;
Coila Sieber&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Hopkinson Drommer&#13;
F . Merlin Kolbe&#13;
0. B . Keiser&#13;
Leo Kucinski&#13;
Charles Littlejohn&#13;
Everett Timm&#13;
Harrison Dawes&#13;
Victor J acobson&#13;
Parnell H. Mahoney&#13;
&#13;
1938&#13;
&#13;
Vera Hayes Campbell&#13;
Kenneth Little John&#13;
Margaret Lease&#13;
Edgar McCracken&#13;
Ke n neth E. Metcalf&#13;
Walter Olsen&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy E . Arnold&#13;
Evelyn DePue McClure&#13;
H elen P earson McCracken&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
Anne Larsen Olsen&#13;
Paul G. Sloan&#13;
Margaret Jeane Anderson Timm&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Keith Arnold&#13;
S. Willard Cunningham&#13;
Fred Davenport&#13;
Duane R Halford&#13;
Miriam Hartley&#13;
Richard V. King&#13;
Lillian Pickersg.ill&#13;
Robert Rae&#13;
Gen e vie ve Whittington S loa n&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Betty Bootjer Butler&#13;
Bernard Feikema&#13;
Don Severeide&#13;
&#13;
1943&#13;
Francis L. Brockman&#13;
&#13;
Feikema&#13;
&#13;
1945&#13;
1946&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
Elbert N. Bales&#13;
Orin K . Goodrich, Jr.&#13;
B ethel Forsling Nettleton&#13;
Sterling Stewart&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Mu riel Lambert Briggs&#13;
William E. Briggs&#13;
Francis Wadedo&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Dor othy Zimmerman Corkhill&#13;
Lyle Couture&#13;
ClariceMoone Hammerstrom&#13;
Shirley Booz Harirngton&#13;
Don Lawrenson&#13;
Robert Melloy&#13;
E l eanor Everett Tasker&#13;
Wm. Yockey&#13;
Richard Youngstrom&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Ina Mae Ham Courture&#13;
Dean Harrington&#13;
Charles Q . Wallace&#13;
Ann Madison Wallace&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Chet Joslin&#13;
Allen Tasker&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Vesta Sma ll Billings&#13;
Margine Schnell&#13;
Mrs. H. P. Shedd&#13;
Dick Throne&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
James Hamilton Fowler&#13;
Joanne Hammerstrom Fowler&#13;
H . Wayne Johnson&#13;
Robert L. Phelps&#13;
Phyllis Runge&#13;
Ruth Wilson&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Bob Beck&#13;
.James Galli&#13;
Stan Griegg&#13;
M rs . Irving Jensen&#13;
&#13;
1955&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Glenn Bushyager&#13;
Dwaine F. Miller&#13;
Robert B. Miller&#13;
Donald Palmer&#13;
&#13;
1956&#13;
&#13;
Harold Corkhill&#13;
Frances Voss Harris&#13;
Georgia Hix Klay&#13;
Russell Klay&#13;
Jack Pommrehn&#13;
&#13;
1957&#13;
&#13;
Leo Harris&#13;
Mildred Nemecheck Moseman&#13;
&#13;
1958&#13;
&#13;
Vir ginia Bray&#13;
Sandra Maddison Hawk&#13;
Donna Haafke Johnson&#13;
Thomas&#13;
Johnsrud&#13;
J. Porter Kaplan&#13;
Darlene Froelich Miller&#13;
Robert R. Reynders&#13;
Carle ne Erickson Throne&#13;
&#13;
1959&#13;
&#13;
Jim Erwin&#13;
N ita Harris Edl und&#13;
DeWitt Killam&#13;
Anita Kalskett Moorhead&#13;
Nadine Dirks Phillips&#13;
Sam Philli ps&#13;
Thomas Watt&#13;
&#13;
1960&#13;
&#13;
Robert Dannenberg&#13;
Phyllis&#13;
Mackintosh&#13;
Killam&#13;
Helen An glum Shontz&#13;
&#13;
1961&#13;
&#13;
H . A. Palmer, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Why not send&#13;
&#13;
YOUR&#13;
&#13;
CONTRIBUTION&#13;
to the 1961-62 L. E. FUND&#13;
&#13;
NOW?&#13;
Simply address to Living Endowment, Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
�ALUMNI REPRESENT&#13;
COLLEGE AT INAUGRALS&#13;
The alumni as listed below, represented&#13;
Morningside College at various inaugrals&#13;
of college presidents throughout the country.&#13;
Reverend '21 and Mrs. Ralph Long at&#13;
the inaugral of Thomas Asa Collins as&#13;
President of North Carolina Wesleyan College in Rocky Mount, North Carolina on&#13;
October 25th.&#13;
Wilson B. '43 and Mrs. Reynolds at the&#13;
inaugral of President J. Copeland as President of Maryville College, Maryville, Tennessee on October 28th.&#13;
Miss Margaret Kidder '23 at the inaugral&#13;
of Leland E. Traywick as president of&#13;
Southwest Missouri State College, Springfield, Missouri on November 14th.&#13;
Mr. Myron Huls·e '37 and Mrs. Hulse at&#13;
the inaugral of the very Reverend Edward&#13;
J. Burke as president of St. John's University, Jamaica, New York on November 1.&#13;
Mr. Myron Hulse '37 and Mrs. Hulse at&#13;
the inaugral of Author Ole Davidson as&#13;
president of Wagner College on Staten&#13;
Island, November 12th.&#13;
Roland W elch '37 and Mrs. Welch of&#13;
Kearney, Nebraska, at the inaugral of Milton J. Hassel as president of Nebraska&#13;
State Teachers College at Kearney on November 15th.&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Hopkins (Lois McCallum&#13;
'48) of New Wilmington, Pennsylvania, at&#13;
the inaugral of Chauncey Goodrich Bey as&#13;
president of Thiel College in Greenville,&#13;
Pennsylvania.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDER WORKING&#13;
ON MOON CRAFT&#13;
Wendell B. Seward '31, after fifteen&#13;
years with NBC-TV, left to enter a newer&#13;
field of space electronics. H e spent two&#13;
years at Bendix Pacific designing transistorized units for ground tracking stations of Project Mercury and moved to&#13;
Hughes Aircraft company in Culver City&#13;
in June to join a surveyor group which is&#13;
producing a TV equipped space craft to be&#13;
soft landed on the moon.&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
"GRANDMA" OF THE NURSERY&#13;
Mrs. E. C. Potter 'Eva Leazer '13" at 74&#13;
is still on the Hospital staff in Roswell,&#13;
New Mexico as nursery Relief nurse or a&#13;
licensed practical nurse. This position&#13;
allows her time to visit daughters in Phoenix and Denver frequently and still do her&#13;
work of taking care of the "newborns".&#13;
Mrs. Potter loves her work and says of&#13;
it, "It is very pleasant and always interesting, and I love it even though it is a&#13;
very responsibile task. Babies are always&#13;
a miracle to me - every new one that&#13;
comes into the nursery is a wonderful piece&#13;
of God's handwork and I still marvel at it."&#13;
"Mom" to some of the doctors and&#13;
"Grandma of the Nursery," Mrs. Potter&#13;
makes her home with a daughter in Roswell,&#13;
the daughter who was born in South&#13;
America when Mrs. Potter was in missionary work at Huancaya, Peru.&#13;
&#13;
REV. JACK D. EALES&#13;
TO NEW YORK CHURCH&#13;
Rev. Jack D. Eales '57, vicar for the last&#13;
three and a half years of Trinity church at&#13;
Denison, Iowa, and Trinity Memorial&#13;
Church at Mapleton, Iowa, has accepted a&#13;
call to become rector of Calvary Episcopal&#13;
church in Utica, N. Y. During his tenure&#13;
at Denison, his church there was completely&#13;
renovated, a new rectory purchased and a&#13;
substantial increase in church and sunday&#13;
school membership and budget recorded.&#13;
Rev. Eales was active in community affairs at Denison. He was vice president of&#13;
the Crawford&#13;
County Tuberculosis and&#13;
Health Association, on the board of directors of the Denison Community Chest, for&#13;
which he was this year's drive chairman,&#13;
t aught the National Chamber of Commerce's Action Course in Practical Politics,&#13;
has been a member of the Episcopal diocese&#13;
of Iowa's department of Christian social&#13;
relations and was appointed by Gov. Her schel Loveless as an original member of&#13;
the Iowa Commission on alcoholism.&#13;
His new church is in downtown Utica&#13;
and will celebrate its 100th birthday anniversary in 1970. It is a 622 communicant&#13;
parish.&#13;
&#13;
�Mrs. M. L. Peterson ('07)&#13;
Mitchell) of Dolliver, Iowa.&#13;
Ralph Eugene Root, 1905 graduate of&#13;
Morningside died in Franklin, N. H., following a brief illness. Funeral services&#13;
were held in Annapolis.&#13;
Professor Root was an instructor in&#13;
mathematics at SUI from 1906 to 1910. He&#13;
had been a professor emeritus of the U. S.&#13;
Naval Postgraduate School since his retirement in 1946 from a post as senior professor and head of the department of&#13;
mathematics and mechanics.&#13;
After teaching at SUI and the University&#13;
of Missouri, Professor Root accepted a post&#13;
in 1913 in the U. S. Naval Academy in&#13;
Annapolis and began his 33-year career of&#13;
training officers in the basic fields of&#13;
mathematics and its applications. He became the first full-time professor in the&#13;
U. S. Naval Post-graduate School and&#13;
played a major role in its dev·e lopment and&#13;
in the advanced training of naval officers.&#13;
When the school was moved to Monterey,&#13;
California, the new building housing the&#13;
library&#13;
and the department of mathematics and mechanics was named Root Hall&#13;
in his honor. Professor and Mrs. Root&#13;
attended the formal dedication of the building in 191&#13;
58.&#13;
Professor Root received an honorary&#13;
Sc. D degree from Morningside College. He&#13;
received an MS dgr from SUI and a Ph. D.&#13;
degree from the University of Chicago. He&#13;
taught at Forest City High School in 19051906.&#13;
Born in Grundy County, Mo., July 19,&#13;
1876, Professor Root was married in 1904&#13;
to Mary K. Batcheller, who survives him.&#13;
Also surviving are four children; Mrs.&#13;
Ralph G. Meader, Bethesda, Md:&#13;
Capt.&#13;
Lloyd E. Root, C. E. C., US. Navy, Great&#13;
Lak·e s, Ill: Mrs. John B. Tuttle, Pelham&#13;
Manor, N. Y.; and Mrs. Ellis P. Root,&#13;
Lutherville, Md.&#13;
Professor Root was&#13;
Society of the Sigma&#13;
Mathematical Society,&#13;
Association of America&#13;
Society for Engineering&#13;
&#13;
a member of the&#13;
Xi, the American&#13;
the Mathematical&#13;
and the American&#13;
Education.&#13;
&#13;
(Lottie E.&#13;
&#13;
Carroll R. Northup '20, died November&#13;
16th in Sioux City after a four month illness.&#13;
&#13;
"Norty" as he was known to his contemporaries and fans, was a star athlete at&#13;
Morningside. He was named all-opponent&#13;
end by Notre Dame in 1917. He earned&#13;
seven football letters, four with the varsity&#13;
and three with the academy. He was president of the student body in 1920.&#13;
From the Sioux City Journal of Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 19. "He coaches all sports at Missouri Valley, Iowa for two years and he&#13;
was line coach at Morningside for a year&#13;
after his graduation.&#13;
"Mr. Northup was a pitcher and outfield&#13;
and played semi-professional baseball for&#13;
numerous teams in Iowa and South Dakota&#13;
and in other sections in the midwest".&#13;
At the annual "M" Club luncheon at&#13;
Homecoming time three years ago, "Norty"&#13;
was awarded an "M" Club blanket in recognition of his support for and enthusiasm&#13;
in athletics.&#13;
Again quoting the Sioux City Journal "Sporting enthusiasts termed him one of&#13;
the all time greats at Morningside College".&#13;
He is survived by Mrs. Northup and a&#13;
daughter Helen. Helen graduated from&#13;
Morningside in 1946. They live at 2219&#13;
Douglas Street in Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. A . Greenfield (Mollie Krieger '23)&#13;
of Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
Mrs. E. G. Lovelace (Daisy English) '15&#13;
of El Paso, Texas passed away in December 1960.&#13;
Dr. John Kellogg '04 of 2601 Circle Drive&#13;
in St. Louis died August 10th after a long&#13;
illness.&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
�Mrs. Ruth Erdeen Bailey Willcutt ('31)&#13;
died October 2, 1961.&#13;
Mrs. Willcutt lived&#13;
at 8 Mishawaka Drive in Keokuk, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Clare D. Schaap '25 died on October&#13;
14, 1961. His home was in Algona, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Grace Mae Currier, graduate of the&#13;
academy and former student in the Class&#13;
of 1909 di·ed September 7th in California.&#13;
Miss Currier, a retired school teacher&#13;
and social worker, graduated from Northwestern University. She had taught school&#13;
in Illinois and was a supervisor of an&#13;
orphanage in Grenoble, France, for world&#13;
War I. Orphans. She received her masters&#13;
degree from Columbia University, had&#13;
studied at Berlin Unversity and during&#13;
World War II helped a Jewish family&#13;
escape from Berlin to Canada.&#13;
She had lived in California since 1926&#13;
and had done social work at the Techachapi&#13;
Women's prison and later served as dietician at an orphanage in Oakland. Her&#13;
last job before retirement was as superintendent of the retired teachers home in&#13;
Pasadena.&#13;
Bernice L. Bowman '14 (Mrs. Don A .&#13;
Jenkins) died very suddenly at Tucson,&#13;
Arizona on November 14th. Funeral services were held in Minneapolis and burial&#13;
in Fort Snelling National Cemetery. She&#13;
is survived by her husband, Don A. Jenkins,&#13;
a daughter, Mrs. Omer Seim of Deephaven,&#13;
Minnesota, a son, Rodney A. Jenkins of&#13;
Minneapolis, seven grandchildren and a&#13;
brother, Russell E. Bowman, of Miami,&#13;
Florida. She was graduated from Ida Grove&#13;
High School and Morningside College and&#13;
taught in the schools of Eagle Grove,&#13;
Onawa and Sanborn, Iowa. She took graduate work at the University of Chicago.&#13;
In 1921 she married Don A. Jenkins of&#13;
Minneapolis and made her home there&#13;
teaching for several years in the Minneapolis schools. For the past five years they&#13;
had spent the summers in their summer&#13;
home on Woman Lake in northern Minnesota and winters in Tucson, Arizona.&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
Morningside "T" Shirts went to these&#13;
&#13;
"WEE MORNINGSIDERS"&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Richard V. King . .41 of Cha dd's&#13;
Ford, Pennsylvania a daughter born on August&#13;
30th. Rebecca Jeanne Kin g.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Tom Davies (Carolyn Held '51),&#13;
a son, Duane Thomas, born September 18, 1961.&#13;
Their h ome is Princeton, Oregon.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ray Gustavson '49, a son, Mark&#13;
Alan, born March 28, 1961. Their h ome is 325&#13;
W. 27th St., Sio ux City, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. James F. Martens. '61 (Kea&#13;
Heesch '60) a daughter,&#13;
Catherine Louise, born&#13;
August 22, 1961 Their&#13;
home is 2319 South 15th,&#13;
St. J oseph, Mo.&#13;
To Mrs. Cor rine Rickson&#13;
(Co rrine R. Cooley&#13;
Julie Ann. born July 22, 1961.&#13;
'45) a daughter,&#13;
The Ricksons live at 11706 Pierce St., Omaha&#13;
44, Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. C. W. Cropley '49, a son, Stuart&#13;
Edward, born September 14, 1961. The Cropleys&#13;
live at 1075 All en Ave., Garner, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. David Chapman '60, a son, Dean&#13;
Scott, born July 8, 1961.. The Chapman s live&#13;
at 1106 1/2 Bahn son, S ioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. John Sprugel (Lovice M. Kingsbury '47) a girl, Lynne Marie, born July 29 ,&#13;
The Sprugels live at 204 8th Ave, S ibley, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Blaine D. Beane '59 , a da u ghter.&#13;
Deborah Ann , born August 7.. Their&#13;
address is&#13;
3715 Jones, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gera ld Stein '56, a son Michael&#13;
Phillip born Sept. 25, 1961.&#13;
Their address is&#13;
6236 Stanl ey Ave., San Diego 15, Californ ia .&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert H. Bates '53, a girl.&#13;
Stephan ia Anne, born Nov. 1. 1960. The Bates&#13;
lives at 3717 Ingalls Ave, Alexandria, Va.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. G. Robert Carlson '60 (Deanna&#13;
Stiegelmeyer .. 60) a boy, Jay Robert, born Sept.&#13;
17, 1961. . They live at 209 Denver St. , Apt. 5 ,&#13;
Brighton, Colorado.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Don Shelton '49 (Betty Fletcher&#13;
'50) a girl, Sally Lyn . born May 2, 1961. They&#13;
live at 804 W. Hazel, Decatur, Ill.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Earle E. Custer '53, a boy,&#13;
Michael Paul. born on Oct. 9th. The Custers&#13;
live at 2 Bourne Ave. , Hebronville, Mass.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Marlo June '59 (Janice Thompson) a gir l, Karen Marie, born August 7. the&#13;
Junes live at 6621 Minnetonka Blvd., Minneapoli s&#13;
26. Minn.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roger B Parsons ('54) , twins,&#13;
Russell &amp; Sh aron, born Jan 18, 19Gl. The Parsons li ve at 6268 Belhave n, Riverside, Californi a .&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Marvin B. Messenger (Marjorie&#13;
Friedrichs '61) a son, Monte Mitchell , born&#13;
August 26. 1961. T hey live at 3526 Mt. Vernon,&#13;
Fort Worth, Texas.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dick Pruehs (Luanne Gr egalunas .. 62) a son, born Sept. 1. Th ey live at&#13;
4711 S. Lakeport Rd ., Sio ux City . Iowa .&#13;
To Mr &amp; Mrs. J ack A. Hall '57 (Beverly G iehm&#13;
'57) a son, Gregory Scott, born Oct. 8th. They&#13;
live at 1005 14th St., Eldora, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alex Pelelo, '51 , a daughter&#13;
born October 9, 1961. They live at Merrill, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Howard Palmer '61, a daughter&#13;
born Sept. 23, 1961. They live at 310 S. Fairmount St., Siou x City, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gene (Dow) Dymkows ki '60, a&#13;
daughter&#13;
Jeane, born in June.&#13;
They live at&#13;
Charl otte, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Delaine B. Koch '58 (Judy Dirks&#13;
'61) a girl, Karen born Nov. 14, 1961. They live&#13;
in Akron, I owa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Karl Kletschke&#13;
&#13;
'51, 3513 Virginia St. , Sioux City, twin daughters&#13;
born Nov.&#13;
12, 1961.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Art Barrett, Jr. '54 , of Omaha,&#13;
a daughter.&#13;
&#13;
�To Mr. &amp; Mrs. James Goff '51, 3725 Ridge&#13;
Ave., Sioux City ; a daughter&#13;
born Jan. 3, 1962.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Kenneth Zeising '55, 1116 28th&#13;
St., Sioux City, a son born January&#13;
4 1962.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Kermit Fountain '58, Sloan ,&#13;
Iowa. a son bo rn October 24 . 1961.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Hube r t McClary (Violet Baker&#13;
'54) . a daughter&#13;
born October 26, 1961.&#13;
The&#13;
McClary's h ave two other sons, Gregg and Perry&#13;
and a daughter Brenda. Their address is R. R.&#13;
2, Wayne, Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Meyer Shragg '52, a daughter&#13;
born, Jamieson Mindelle, on De cember 5, 1961.&#13;
The Shraggs live a t 10813 First Avenue, Whittie r .&#13;
California .&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roger Hass '59, a daughter&#13;
born, Carol Joy, on December 18, 1961.&#13;
The&#13;
Hass family lives at 5026 Sunset Drive Ralston,&#13;
Nebraska.&#13;
&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. K e ith C. Rundell '60, a son&#13;
born, Cla rk Eugene, on Oc t. 20, 1961. The Rundells live at 10609 Fowler Ave .. Omah a 34. Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Clifford D . Hansen '54 (Janet&#13;
Durlin '53) a girl, Lori Ann. born Sept. 21, 1961.&#13;
They live at 2016 W. 19th, S ioux City, Iowa.&#13;
The Hansens have two other childre n Kirk&#13;
and Lisa.&#13;
Rev. &amp; Mrs. Eldon Jandebeur&#13;
(x57 E11en Huster) have adopted a girl, Beth Ann , b orn August&#13;
16th., 1961.. The Jandebeurslive at 909 16th,&#13;
Aurora. Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. J. 0. Harvey '57 , a girl, Vi cki&#13;
Lynn born Sept. 8, 1961. they also have a boy&#13;
Howard The Harveyslive at 1279 E. M inneh a ha&#13;
Ave., St. Paul 6, M inn.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert J. Lars on '56 (Marlys&#13;
Kinnan '58) twin daughters&#13;
Meredith&#13;
Sue and&#13;
Marian Kae, born March 3, 1961. the Larsons&#13;
live at 1117 Jennings,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alan Southern (Betty Sarch et&#13;
'48) on Oct. 13th, a daughter,&#13;
L o ri Renee. The&#13;
Southerns live at 4615 Aurora Ave. No., Seattle,&#13;
Washington.&#13;
To Donna Peterson Esmay 61 and James Esmay&#13;
'60, on October 29, a s on , David James.&#13;
The&#13;
Esmays live a t 906 N. Guignard Drive, Sumter,&#13;
N. Carolina.&#13;
To Myrtle Geake Stephens '48 and K enneth R .&#13;
('50), a son, Graig Holloway, bo rn&#13;
Stephens&#13;
August 9 t h. The Stephens h a ve two other children, Gwendolyn 9 and William 8 . Their&#13;
address is 512 Burton St., Storm Lake, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Donald Johns (Carol Hatch&#13;
. . 51) a son , Michael Scot on July&#13;
8, 196·1 .&#13;
Michael h as two sisters,&#13;
Marsh 10 Barbara 7,&#13;
and a brother Paul 4 1/2. The Johns' live at&#13;
Route l, Pierson, Iowa.&#13;
To Virgil and Doris May Mauer (bot h '58 ) a&#13;
The Mauers&#13;
s on, Steven, on Sept. 20, 1961.&#13;
have a n other s on - aged 3. They live at 1696&#13;
Wisconsin i n D ubuque.&#13;
To Paul '48 and Mar t h a Ralston, a daughter.&#13;
The Rals ton s live at 1120 25th St.. Marion , Iowa.&#13;
To Jerome&#13;
Goldis '61 a nd Mrs. Goldis, a daugh ter, Maryl Faye on November 4th, 1961.&#13;
The&#13;
Goldis live at 10915 A. Lochmond Circle, Dallas&#13;
18, Texas.&#13;
To William D. a nd Elaine (Johnson) Bowman&#13;
('50) a daughter, Beverly Ann on Novembe r 24th.&#13;
Be verl y Ann h as a brother Re id William, 16&#13;
months old.&#13;
T h e Bowmans li ve at 505 Elm&#13;
Street in Coon Rapids , Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
WEDDINGS&#13;
Donald W. Palmer '55 to Sandra R.&#13;
Sanders in Grace Methodist Church in&#13;
Waterloo, Iowa. Their address is 119 1/2&#13;
Allen St., Waterloo, Iowa.&#13;
Mareida Joy Scheidt ('64) to Carl Martin&#13;
at the Good Sheperd Lutheran Church in&#13;
&#13;
Reno, Nevada. Their address is 2225 Harrison St., Apt. 205 in Oakland, California.&#13;
Vesta Feller Cosgrove '48 to Louis R.&#13;
Pryor.&#13;
Rev. John Ervin Feller '21 of&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa, father of the bride, performed the ceremony in the chapel of the&#13;
First Methodist Church in Colorado Springs.&#13;
Mrs. Pryor's family includes her 7 1/2&#13;
year&#13;
old son, John Erwin.&#13;
They live at 503&#13;
McKee Drive in Gallup, New Mexico. Mrs.&#13;
Proyer teaches English and speech at the&#13;
Gallup high school.&#13;
Edythe Albert '41 to Eugene F . Cawood,&#13;
June 15, 1960. Mr. Cawood is Regional&#13;
Life Manager of the State Farm Insurance&#13;
Company. Mrs. Cawood was in the Music&#13;
Education department at the University of&#13;
Michigan. They live at 209 Forest Hill&#13;
Dr., West Lafayette, Indiana.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS NOTES&#13;
1905&#13;
Emma F 'a ir Young '05 of 438 Empress&#13;
A venue, in Encino stated in a recent letter, "I am happy to report that my family&#13;
and I are all in good health. We do have&#13;
fires and earthquakes, and maybe floods&#13;
but still we survive and enjoy California."&#13;
1907&#13;
Mr. P. E. DeGriselles ('07) now 82, lives&#13;
at Worthington, Minnesota. He mentioned&#13;
in a note that his history is about finished.&#13;
The DeGriselles had a family of four boys&#13;
and four girls. They now have 2 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. Mrs.&#13;
DeGrisselles is confined to a wheelchair&#13;
and Mr. DeGrisselles cares for her, besides&#13;
working on the lawn, gardening, shoveling&#13;
snow and participating in community activities. He lives at 212 West Okabena in&#13;
Worthington.&#13;
1909&#13;
Ed M. Brown '0,9, (supposedly retired) is&#13;
busy promoting activity and attendance at&#13;
a Monthly Coffee Club (A De Land,&#13;
Florida, Chamber of Commerce activity).&#13;
He also is promoter of a Membership club&#13;
meeting monthly. In addition to all this&#13;
h e is investigating the advisability of organizing a United Fund in DeLand and&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
�other. nearby communities, in a joint operation.&#13;
The Browns (Mrs. Brown is Ida Ullman&#13;
'09) live at De Leon Springs, Florida, Box&#13;
55.&#13;
1912&#13;
Ethel Shannon '12 will be retiring this&#13;
year after having taught 50 years. Much&#13;
of Miss Shannon's teaching was in the&#13;
Fort Dodge Public School system. She lives&#13;
at 214 N. 16th St. in Fort Dodge, Iowa.&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Gehring '12 (Rosa Dodge),&#13;
Charles City College, is librarian of the&#13;
Howard Public Library at Howard, South&#13;
Dakota.&#13;
1916&#13;
M. Louis Crouch '16 has retired from the&#13;
position of Head Librarian in the State&#13;
Teachers College in Wayne, Nebraska and&#13;
now lives at 1706 Morningside Ave., Apt.&#13;
H., in Sioux City.&#13;
1918&#13;
Alice Miller Lindhorst '18, whose husband&#13;
Dr. Frank A. Lindhorst is Chairman of the&#13;
Department of Bible and Religious Education at the University of Pacific, in Stocton, California, keeps herself busy with&#13;
home, church, and university activities. She&#13;
acts as a reader for several of the Bible&#13;
teachers at the university. Her address is&#13;
242 E. Churchill, Stocton 4, California.&#13;
&#13;
edition of Who's Who of American Women&#13;
issued in 1961. Miss Vickers is head&#13;
librarian of Fracker Library at Buena Vista&#13;
College in Storm Lake, Iowa. She will soon&#13;
be involved in the planning of a new library&#13;
building in that campus.&#13;
&#13;
1919&#13;
Helen Meeks Hindman '19 and Mr. Hindman enjoyed a family reunion this summer&#13;
with four of their five children and the&#13;
grandchildren. A new grandson, Charles&#13;
Michael Simet came along on October 7th .&#13;
- too late for the reunion.&#13;
&#13;
1928&#13;
Margaret Miller '28 is teaching American&#13;
and English Literature and American History in Huron Senior High School. She&#13;
states that she will probably keep at it&#13;
until she retires because she really loves&#13;
to teach.&#13;
1931&#13;
H. Milo Hall "31 is presently serving as&#13;
the pastor of the Plover-Havelock charges&#13;
in the North Iowa Conference of the Methodist Church. He was formerly at Riverside&#13;
Methodist Church in Fort Dodge.&#13;
1932&#13;
Mrs. Norma C. Schumann '32 of 9219 N .&#13;
Clarendon Ave., In Portland, Oregon is with&#13;
the U. S. National Bank there. Her husband lost his life in an automobile accident&#13;
in November. She plays the organ and has&#13;
been doing relief work during the summer&#13;
at the Methodist Church near her home.&#13;
&#13;
1922&#13;
Wesley F. Gehring '22 has purchased and&#13;
is operating the Gehring Insurance Agency&#13;
formerly owned by E. W. Gehring, now&#13;
deceased.&#13;
1923&#13;
Leroy Rowse '23 was again an instructor&#13;
this summer in the National Science Foundation Institute at George Peabody College&#13;
for Teachers in Nashville, Tenn. He taught&#13;
Physics and Earth Science. Leroy teaches&#13;
physics at Central high school in Sioux&#13;
City.&#13;
Lucille Vickers '23 is listed in the second&#13;
&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
1924&#13;
Muriel DeWitt Rowse '24 received a&#13;
Masters of Arts degre·e from George Peabody College for Teachers at commencement exercises August 18th.&#13;
Muriel DeWitt Rowse '24 received her&#13;
masters degree from George Peabody College just 37 years after receiving her BA&#13;
at Morningside. Muriel teaches 5th grade&#13;
at Smith .&#13;
Paul C. Ellis '24 is in his 33rd year as&#13;
a Methodist Minister. He is in his 7th year&#13;
in Villisca in the South Iowa Conference.&#13;
&#13;
1927&#13;
Joseph T. Ott '27 is advertising director&#13;
for the Boreman Company in Des Moines,&#13;
publishers of the Merchants Trade Journal.&#13;
He joined the firm last September 15, after&#13;
being associated with Better Homes and&#13;
Gardens. Joe maintains an office at 183&#13;
Madison Avenue in New York and lives on&#13;
Parish Lane in Darien, Connecticut. He&#13;
and Mrs. Ott have a son, a sophomore in&#13;
college.&#13;
&#13;
�1937&#13;
Dr. Eugene O. Bovee ('37) was recently&#13;
named associate professor in sanitary engineering research at the Phelps Sanitary&#13;
Engineeering Research Laboratory of the&#13;
University of Florida at Gainesville, Fla.&#13;
He has spent the past six years in the&#13;
Biology Department. His new duties are&#13;
research and teaching on the graduate level&#13;
of the microbiology of Sanitation problems.&#13;
The teaching includes seminars and direction of graduate thesis.&#13;
Eugene's family includes a daughter,&#13;
Francis Anne, a freshman at Rice University, a son Gregory who is a high school&#13;
sophomore, and a son Matthew 3 years of&#13;
age. Their address is 3652 N. W. 7th Ave.,&#13;
Gainesville, Florida.&#13;
1938&#13;
Vera Hayes Campbell '38 received her&#13;
Master of Arts Degree in speech and drama&#13;
from Colorado State College, Greeley,&#13;
Colorado in August. During the 1960-61&#13;
repertory seasons, she was a member of&#13;
the Little Theatre of the Rockies, appearing&#13;
in Pygmalion, Gigi, Picnic, Romeo&#13;
and&#13;
Juliet, Look H omeward Angel and the&#13;
Gazebo. Mrs. Campbell is English and&#13;
speech instructor of the Dunlap Community&#13;
School.&#13;
1939&#13;
William E. Clemens '39 is the guidance&#13;
director at the Willow Community schools&#13;
in Cherokee County and Mrs. Clemens&#13;
(Ruth Thatcher '39) t eaches 2nd grade. Bill&#13;
and Ruth live in Storm Lake at 2006 W.&#13;
5th St.&#13;
1942&#13;
Dr. &amp; Mrs. John A. Adamson (La Vonne&#13;
Wertz ..42) and their three children have&#13;
recently moved to a new home in Dinuba,&#13;
California. Their new address is 386 Nichols&#13;
A venue, Dinuba. During the past year&#13;
La Vonne has become very interested in the&#13;
study of Communism. She attended The&#13;
Southern California School of Anti-Communism in Los Angeles in August, and&#13;
since that time has been speaking to service&#13;
clubs, church groups and Women's clubs on&#13;
the subject.&#13;
&#13;
1943&#13;
Dorothy E. Brown '43 is an elementary&#13;
classroom teacher in Fort Dodge.&#13;
1947&#13;
Harold D. Minor '47 moved September 1&#13;
to the Department of Adult Publications,&#13;
Editorial Division, General Board of Education of the Methodist Church in Nashville,&#13;
as editor of Adult Teacher and Wesley&#13;
Quarterly. He had spent the previous five&#13;
years as Director of Adult work, North&#13;
Carolina conference. H e lives at 906 Sutton&#13;
Hill Rd., Nashville, T enn.&#13;
1948&#13;
Harold A. Mulford, Jr. '48, a member of&#13;
the State University of Iowa College of&#13;
Medicine, was named to an associate professorship in psychiatry. Before joining&#13;
the SUI faculty in 1956 he taught at&#13;
Northwest Missouri State College. The&#13;
holder of a SUI Ph. D. degree, Mulford is&#13;
director of the division of alcoholism&#13;
studies at the university.&#13;
1949&#13;
H enry Langstraat, Jr. '49, having obtained a masters degree, is teaching in the&#13;
Washington Elementary school in Phoenix,&#13;
Arizona. Washington Elementary is in a&#13;
rapidly growing school district in rapidly&#13;
growing Phoenix.&#13;
1950&#13;
Roy Haenfler '50 is enrolled at Arizona&#13;
State University. He is working towards&#13;
his M. A. Degree in sch ool administration.&#13;
His present address is 1018 Dorsey Lane,&#13;
Apt. 1, Tempe, Arizona.&#13;
Norman Clark ('50) has been elected&#13;
secretary and a m ember of the board of&#13;
directors of Sc,a rborough &amp; Company in&#13;
Chicago. The comp,a ny specializes in insurance for banks. Norman lives at 4613&#13;
W. 100th Place, Oak Lawn, Illinois.&#13;
1951&#13;
Darrell V. Mitchell '51, Methodist minister at Sidney, Iowa , spent nine months of&#13;
Clinical Pastoral Training, under the auspices of the National Council for Clinical&#13;
Training, at two institutions affiliated with&#13;
the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, Kansas. He took his training at the Topeka&#13;
State Hospital and the Boys Industrial&#13;
School. Five other ministers from oth er&#13;
&#13;
43&#13;
&#13;
�denominations were in training with Rev.&#13;
Mitchell.&#13;
J. Porter Kaplan '51 is enrolled for the&#13;
academic year 1961-62 in the graduate program of education and training in social&#13;
work in the school of Social Welfare at&#13;
Florida State University at Tallahassee,&#13;
Fla.&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
Fred A. Brown '52 has been awarded a&#13;
National Science Foundation Academic&#13;
Year Institute at the University of Illinois.&#13;
He is studying for a Master of Arts degree in Mathematics and will teach again&#13;
in the fall of '62. The Browns have 5&#13;
children, Debbie 11, Tommy 10, Barbara 9,&#13;
Joan 7, and Rodney 6. They live at 1210&#13;
Garden Hills Dr., Champaign, Illinois.&#13;
Dr. Alton W. (Skip) Cowan '52 is Superintendent of schools at Eaton Rapids,&#13;
Michigan. He and Mrs. Cowan (Briar Cliff&#13;
'53) and their children, Mike, David, Patrick, Jane, Nancy and Christopher moved&#13;
there from the Catskill Mountains in New&#13;
York this past summer.&#13;
Skip obtained his Ph. D. in Education&#13;
from Michigan State University in 1960.&#13;
The address in Eaton Rapids is 114 S.&#13;
East St.&#13;
Robert R. Eidsmoe '52 has been appointed executive council member for the Fourth&#13;
judicial district for the junior bar section,&#13;
Iowa State Bar Association. Bob is a&#13;
Sioux City Attorney.&#13;
The junior bar section is comprised of&#13;
lawyers under the age of 36, and its work&#13;
is to assist members of the senior bar with&#13;
various functions.&#13;
Bob is a partner in the law firm of&#13;
Gleysteen, Nelson, Harper, Kunze and&#13;
Eidsmoe. He obtained his law de,g ree at&#13;
the New York University school of law.&#13;
1954&#13;
Audrey Johnson ('54) (Mrs. Cliff Wobken) has moved to Des Moines, Iowa where&#13;
her husband is an account supervisor with&#13;
Meredith Press, division of Meredith Publishing Company. He was formerly an&#13;
assistant Manager with Montgomery Ward&#13;
in Appleton, Wisconsin. The Wobkens live&#13;
at 4039 70th St., Des Moines 22, Iowa.&#13;
Kenneth Van Der Sloot '54 received his&#13;
&#13;
44&#13;
&#13;
masters of music education degree from the&#13;
University of Colorado this past summer.&#13;
Ken is teaching music in Estherville. The&#13;
Van Der Sloots have two children, Lisa&#13;
Ann - 3 and Joel Ewayne - 1.&#13;
&#13;
1955&#13;
On June 30, 1961, Michael E. Paradasinos&#13;
'55 became an American citizen and his last&#13;
name was changed to the American version&#13;
"Par adise". Michael is employed by the&#13;
Weld County School District in Colorado&#13;
and teaches in Milliken High School.&#13;
1956&#13;
Robert J. Lar son '56 has been appointed&#13;
special assistant probation officer of the&#13;
juvenile court by the Woodbury County&#13;
board of supervisors. Larson is a partner&#13;
in the law fi r m of McQueen, Forker, Dandos and Larson. Mrs. Larson is Marlys&#13;
Kinnas '58.&#13;
Charles Phenix '56 is employed in the&#13;
health department of Rochester, Minn. He&#13;
is the City Sanitar ian, handling all situations that pertain to sanitation. His address is 428 6th St. S. W. in Rochester.&#13;
Paul W. Sweeney, Jr. '56 is doing graduate study at Oberlin College, working toward a master of Arts in their teaching&#13;
program.&#13;
Lucy Seiko Yoshioka '56 (Mrs. Walter&#13;
Buhler )is teaching private voice and piano&#13;
lessons and lives at 8707 S. W. Terwilliger&#13;
Blvd., Portland 19, Oregon.&#13;
1957&#13;
Jack E. Lamb '57 is associated as a&#13;
senior partner with the firm of L. Morris&#13;
Clark and Associates, New York Finger&#13;
Lakes only Registered Securities Underwriters.&#13;
Bob and Pat Tiemans (Both '57) and&#13;
their 3 year old daughter, Robin, have&#13;
moved to DeKalb, Illinois, where Bob is&#13;
assistant professor in the Speech department at Northern Illinois University. Their&#13;
address is 128 Tilton Park Drive.&#13;
1958&#13;
Keith Roeper '58 r eceived his CPA (Certified Public Accountant) certificate at a&#13;
meeting of the Iowa Society of Certified&#13;
Public Accountants in Iowa City on Sep-&#13;
&#13;
�tember 28th. Mr. Roeper passed the exam&#13;
in May. He is an employee of the firm of&#13;
Keightley and Pedersen in Sioux City.&#13;
1959&#13;
Gaylord Rasmussen '5,9 is a section manager at Sioux City's J. C. Penny Co. the&#13;
Rasmussens have two daughters, Jill Suzann, born in December 1959, and Tracy&#13;
Ann born in December, 1960. They live at&#13;
1206 South Paxton, in Sioux City.&#13;
Merlin A. Anderson '5,9 is a member of&#13;
the faculty of the Maple Valley Community Schools in Mapleton, Iowa. He is&#13;
director of publications and is instructor&#13;
in journalism, American history and English. His address is 602 South 7th St.,&#13;
Mapleton, Iowa.&#13;
David A. Woods '59 has been transferred&#13;
to Charlotte,&#13;
North Carolina. His new&#13;
assignment is a Buying Department Manager for the Charlotte Branche of Ralston&#13;
Purina Company.&#13;
The Woods have a&#13;
young son Bradley and live at 3214 Frederick Place in Charlotte.&#13;
Alan Lovrein '59 is working toward his&#13;
Master's Degree in Psychiatric Social Work&#13;
at the University of Nebraska. He plans&#13;
on finishing his work there in June 1962.&#13;
1960&#13;
Albert A. (Al) Anderson '60 has transferred from the Boston University school&#13;
of Theology to the graduate school at Boston U. where he is working on a Master of&#13;
Arts degree in Philosophy. Mrs. Anderson&#13;
( Susan McMurray .. 62) and Al live at 14&#13;
Buswell, Boston 15, Mass.&#13;
Mrs. Lovrein (Jane Lockwod .. 60) who&#13;
was secretary for the Admissions Office at&#13;
Morningside, is working for the Midwest&#13;
Life Insurance Co. Alan and Jane live at&#13;
1236 North .2 6th St., in Lincoln, Nebraska.&#13;
1961&#13;
Eugene Kaczinski '61 is employed as Production Supervisor at Nielson Coupon&#13;
Cleaning House in Clinton. His address is&#13;
2500 1/2North 3rd St.&#13;
1962&#13;
Robert E. O'Harrow ('62) is employed by&#13;
the Aurora Police Department. Mrs. O'Harrow (Constance B. Moore . .61) and Bob&#13;
have a son Dennis born in August 1960.&#13;
They live at 1170 Elmira, Aurora, Colorado.&#13;
&#13;
WILL HE KEEP OR HAND OFF?&#13;
One of the fringe benefits that go along&#13;
with being editor of the Morningside is that&#13;
an editor's page can be inserted and the&#13;
editor can use a portion of the space to&#13;
proudly print a picture of his first grandchild. The editor's wife demands equal&#13;
recognition as the grandmother.&#13;
I think it is understandable to all that the&#13;
Morningsider cannot print pictures of grandchildren of Morningsiders as such, unless of&#13;
course the grandfather is edito. or one or&#13;
r&#13;
both parents are Morningsiders.&#13;
Actually that is the case of Craig Patrick&#13;
Croston shown above. His mother is Judy&#13;
Larsen '54 and his father is Don Croston '56.&#13;
&#13;
They live at 9920 112th S. W. in Tacoma,&#13;
Washington where Don is a Lieutenant in&#13;
the Air Force and stationed at McChord&#13;
A. F. B.&#13;
&#13;
45&#13;
&#13;
�DIRECTORY&#13;
1891&#13;
Wm. Jepson,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
H. W. Mahood, Deceased&#13;
J. B. Trimble, Deceased&#13;
Ed Mahood, Deceased&#13;
J. H . O'Donoghue, Deceased&#13;
1893&#13;
Thomas F. Warner,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
1894&#13;
Edward M. Corbett, Deceased&#13;
1895&#13;
E. L. Benedict, Deceased&#13;
F. J. Plondke, Deceased&#13;
1896&#13;
James Benedict, Deceased&#13;
Frank Empey,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Henry J . Holbert, Deceased&#13;
F . W. Mitchell, Sherwood Manor,&#13;
900 Leuda, Fort Worth, Texas&#13;
Dora A. Eisentraut, (Mrs. Arthur&#13;
A. Byrkit), 1147 S . Ardmore&#13;
Ave., Los Angeles, California&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
E. T. Antrim, Deceased&#13;
Etta Fourmer, (Mrs. Everett Bettenger), 607 8th St., Convalescent Center, Fort Worth, Texas&#13;
1897&#13;
Frederick G. Henke, (Charles&#13;
City), 307 2nd Ave., Charles&#13;
City, Iowa&#13;
1899&#13;
Sidney L. Chandler, D eceased&#13;
Asbury Dean, Deceased&#13;
Walter Bruce Empey, 13505 S.&#13;
E. River Rd., Portland 22,&#13;
Oregon&#13;
Jacob&#13;
Eisentrant, 6 Southard&#13;
St., Trenton, N. J.&#13;
Adam R. Hastings, Unknown&#13;
E . C. Richards, Deceased&#13;
1900&#13;
Carie Bartlett, Deceased&#13;
Hattie M. Bartlett,&#13;
(Mrs. W.&#13;
Bruce Empey), Deceased&#13;
James A. Davies, D eceased&#13;
Edna Hathaway, (Mrs. Boylon)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Alfred H. Jastram, Remsen, Iowa&#13;
Clarence Van Horne,&#13;
Parshall,&#13;
No. Dak.&#13;
Robt. N. Van Horne, Deceased&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Charles&#13;
Clara&#13;
Yetter,&#13;
Flint), Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Mary Churchill, Arthur, Iowa&#13;
1901&#13;
Harry Adair, Deceased&#13;
Allison G. Folsom, Unknown&#13;
A. L . Haines, 224 Cherry St.,&#13;
Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
Herbert K eck,&#13;
805 Hinman,&#13;
Evanston, Illinois&#13;
Anna Marsh, (Mrs Oscar Reinhart), Unknown&#13;
A. J. Quirin, Deceased&#13;
Oscar Reinhart, Deceased&#13;
Lincoln F. Sch a ub, (Charles City)&#13;
The Brevoort, 11 Fifth Ave.,&#13;
New York, N. Y.&#13;
Jennie R. Skewis, 303 Lake Ave.,&#13;
--Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
E. D. Conoway, Unknown&#13;
Lulu Flukes, (M.rs. Will Ginger),&#13;
Buffalo Gap, So. Dak.&#13;
Mrs. Francis A. Ginn. 594 Elm&#13;
St., Carlsbad, California&#13;
Cora Millie Mason. Unknown&#13;
Mary Richards, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
46&#13;
&#13;
1902&#13;
Ross B. Brown,&#13;
3815 Jackson&#13;
St.. Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Bessie M.Carr, (Mrs. Cyrus L.&#13;
Gilbe r t), 903 S. 156th St.,&#13;
Seattle, Washington&#13;
Florence M. Cate, Deceased&#13;
Charles Eberly, Lawton, Iowa&#13;
Emma Flathers,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Guy Frary, 304 Canby, Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
Marian E. Gantt, Deceased&#13;
Samuel Knoer, Deceased&#13;
George A. P latts, D eceased&#13;
Fred Jay Seaver, Box 1057,&#13;
Winter Park, Florida&#13;
Ethel Walker,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Michael&#13;
Loftus),&#13;
1055 No. Kingsley&#13;
Drive, Los Angeles, California&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Laura Empey, Unknown&#13;
Hope&#13;
P eters.&#13;
( Mrs.&#13;
Maurice&#13;
Fogg),&#13;
3705 Shenandoah&#13;
Dallas, Texas&#13;
Olive Siman, (Mrs. Harry Cain)&#13;
2207 Central St., Evanston, Ill.&#13;
1903&#13;
George F . Barsalou, Odin, Minn.&#13;
James Davies, Deceased&#13;
Albert B urton Gilbert, Deceased&#13;
George Gilbert, Decea sed&#13;
Mrs. L. W. Crane, (Sophie Hieby)&#13;
4783 34th St., San Diego&#13;
Califonria&#13;
Alfred H. Jastram, Deceased&#13;
Albe rt Kuntz, 7355 Pershing&#13;
Ave., University City, Mo.&#13;
M. F. McDowell, 3090 Myrtle&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. J. McIsaac, Deceased&#13;
Frank Mossman, Deceased&#13;
Hans N issen , Deceased&#13;
Alexander G. Ruthven,&#13;
G. D.,&#13;
Frankfort, Michigan&#13;
D. M. Simpson, Deceased&#13;
Lorne F. Smyle,&#13;
605 1st Ave.,&#13;
Rock Rapids, Iowa&#13;
Daniel Starch (Charles City College). 14 Burgess Rd.,&#13;
Scarsdale, N. Y.&#13;
Pearl Woodford, (Mrs. E. Ill.&#13;
Buchner ), Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Mina Ayres, Unknown&#13;
Ethel Bowers, Early, Iowa&#13;
Charles Carhuff, Unknown&#13;
Elsie Carter,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Mrs. David Cassaday, 2406 E.&#13;
Broadway, Long Beach, Calif.&#13;
Home r Chandler, Unknown&#13;
Louise Cody, Unknown&#13;
Francis E . Dahm,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ernestine&#13;
Day, Unknown&#13;
Grace Depue,&#13;
&#13;
Unknown&#13;
&#13;
Flora&#13;
I. Dunlap, (Mrs. Flora&#13;
Tiss) , Algona, Iowa&#13;
Grace Dunlap,&#13;
(Mrs. Charles&#13;
Kennedy), 15 Washington&#13;
Deadwood. So. Dak.&#13;
Florene Gilbert, (Mrs. Samuel A.&#13;
Torbert), Dickens, Iowa&#13;
Servington Gilbert,&#13;
6324 Warren&#13;
Ave., Minneapolis 24, Minn.&#13;
Sophie Hieby,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
L. W .&#13;
Crane), 4 783 34th, San Diego,&#13;
Californ ia&#13;
Annie Johnson, (Mrs. Joe Stewart), Unknown&#13;
Myrtle Lothian, (Mrs. Myrtle&#13;
Whipple),&#13;
1241 N. B e rendo,&#13;
Los Angeles 27, California&#13;
&#13;
George Marquart. Unknown&#13;
Ralph Milliken, RFD, Los Banos,&#13;
California&#13;
John Newton, 714 25th St.,&#13;
Siou x City, Iowa&#13;
Mabel Oaks,&#13;
(Mrs. George Brosius)&#13;
213 Forest, Vermillion, S. Dak.&#13;
Eda Katherine&#13;
Palmer, Unknown&#13;
Stella Prouty, (Mrs. John F.&#13;
Joseph) ,&#13;
1501 Nebraska St.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ada Seave r. Friendship&#13;
Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Mabel&#13;
Smylie,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
C. M.&#13;
Davidson), 209 Acacia Ave. ,&#13;
Monrovia, California&#13;
Ruth Swartz, Unknown&#13;
Effie White, (Mrs. L. H. Clark),&#13;
939 No. 2nd., Rockford, Ill.&#13;
Lulu Woolhiser , (Mrs. Westrom),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
1904&#13;
Ira R. Aldrich,&#13;
760 E . 14th.,&#13;
Coquille, Oregon&#13;
Stanley Carson, 602 S. Metcalf&#13;
St., Lima, Ohio&#13;
Grace Darling,&#13;
(Mrs. Stanley&#13;
Carson ), 602 S. Metcalf St.,&#13;
Lima, Ohio&#13;
George Finch, 966 Magnolia Ave.,&#13;
Los Angeles, California&#13;
David E. Hadden, Deceased&#13;
Arthur W. Henke,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
John A . (Ackenback) K ellogg,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Mrs. Howard Maynard,&#13;
(Mabel&#13;
Killam),&#13;
5420 Lauren Ct. ,&#13;
Bloomfield, Michigan&#13;
Cora Krueger&#13;
(Cha rles City )&#13;
900 Rockford Rd.,&#13;
Charles City, Iowa&#13;
J. Ralph Magee, 1864 Sherman&#13;
Ave., Evanston, Illinois&#13;
Albert Maynard, Deceased&#13;
Narcissa Miller,&#13;
(Mrs. A . R.&#13;
Toothaker),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Wm. E. Sanders, 3005 E . 2nd ,&#13;
Tucson, Arizona&#13;
Lydia T rimble, Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Reginald Acheson, 5008 Morningside Ave.., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
.&#13;
Wilhelmina Barth , (Mrs. Jones),&#13;
509 So. Pointer Ave.,&#13;
Whittier, California&#13;
Fannie Beacham, (Mrs. Herbert&#13;
Wilson) , Fa·rnhamville, Iowa&#13;
Porter Boals, 505 5th Ave.,&#13;
Payette, Ida ho&#13;
Steve Day, Hubbard, Oregon&#13;
Wm. James Fair. I da Grove, Ia.&#13;
Nina Faulk, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Fields, (Mrs. Otto Baden),&#13;
Jasper, Minnesota&#13;
Katheryn Gibson, (Mrs . Kat hryn&#13;
Long), 1541 Allston St.,&#13;
Houston, Texa s&#13;
Davis Hall,&#13;
Starkweather, No. Da k.&#13;
Walter Harding, Unknown&#13;
Bessie Hargrave, (Mrs. G. W.&#13;
Todd), Unknown&#13;
Floyd Harrington, Unknown&#13;
J ohn Hinsdale, Artisian,&#13;
Calif.&#13;
Wm. D iedrick Lukens,&#13;
Seattle, Washington&#13;
E thel L ymer, Unknown&#13;
Bertha R. Lindhorst, Unknown&#13;
Mabel&#13;
Kellogg, Unknown&#13;
Fred Null, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
�DIRECTORY&#13;
William M. Richards,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lillian Shumaker, (Mrs. F. E.&#13;
Walchter), 115 Dorchester Ave.&#13;
Orlando, Florida&#13;
Alowzo Alphonzo Sifert, Unknown&#13;
Fae Siman, (Mrs. W. R. Mahood)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Jennie&#13;
Smith, Unknown&#13;
Almeda Wadhams,&#13;
1518 Court,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Fred B. Williams, 509 E. Madis on St.. R a pid City, So. Dak.&#13;
1905&#13;
w. K. Blackwell, Woodbine, Iowa&#13;
Rena&#13;
Bowker .&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
F. H.&#13;
Trimble),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Carrie Brown, Deceased&#13;
Charles E. Carroll, Unknown&#13;
Myrtilla Cook, (Mrs. W. Lee&#13;
Lewis ),&#13;
2323&#13;
Central Park&#13;
Ave ., Evanston, Illinois&#13;
W. E. Debenham, 8 Country&#13;
Club Rd., Danville, Illinois&#13;
Mabel E. Ellerbroek, (Mrs. Osher&#13;
Schlaifer), Unknown&#13;
Emma Fair, (Mrs. D .. L. Young),&#13;
4338 E mpress, Encino, Calif.&#13;
Virginia&#13;
Fair,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Joseph&#13;
Trimble),&#13;
Galva, Iowa&#13;
Beatrice Gary. (Mrs. James Mclearn)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Cyrus L. Gilbert, 903 S. 156th&#13;
St.,&#13;
Seattle, Washington&#13;
Anna Goodall, Deceased&#13;
Earl B. Hanna, D eceased&#13;
c. E. Harding, Deceased&#13;
Anna&#13;
Holingworth,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
J.&#13;
Wilbur Green), Unknown&#13;
E. H. Hulser, Deceased&#13;
.&#13;
Clara Killa m, (Mrs. Clara Fmch)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Maude Kling. (Mrs. R. H. Darling)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Coralinn Lockin,&#13;
(Mrs . H ugh&#13;
Miller), Maple ton, Iowa&#13;
Alice Marsh, (Mrs. H. D . Newton), Unknown&#13;
Carl W. Maynard, D eceased&#13;
John W. McCarthy, 77333 . Appuson Laguna Beach, California&#13;
Normal McCay, Deceased&#13;
Wil J. Morgan, Deceased&#13;
George J. Poppenheimer,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Ralph E . Root, Deceased&#13;
Herbert B. Saylor, Deceased&#13;
Simon D. Stulken,, U nknown&#13;
D. L. Young. Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Nellie Arthur, Unknown&#13;
Ora&#13;
Barringer,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Hugh&#13;
Barbour), Emmetsburg, Iowa&#13;
Edwin Bartlett, 281 El. Bonita,&#13;
Millbrae, California&#13;
Ora Black, (Mrs. Ora B rown),&#13;
Morrisville, N . Y.&#13;
Pearl M. Boddy, (Mrs. George&#13;
8807 15th Ave.&#13;
McKerchen),&#13;
N. E., Seattle, Washington&#13;
James Brandow, U nknown&#13;
Lilliee P. Brassfield, Unknown&#13;
Mary Brassfield, Unknown&#13;
Bessie R. Brown, Unknown&#13;
Clive Brown, Unknown&#13;
Ida Bryan, Emmetsburg, I owa&#13;
Roscoe Bryant, Unknown&#13;
Zula Culbertson,&#13;
(Mrs. J . W.&#13;
McCarthy), 10303 E ldora Ave.,&#13;
Sunland, California&#13;
.&#13;
Zilla Deno, (Mrs. Harry Henion),&#13;
2345 East Main, Mesa, Arizona&#13;
&#13;
Anna Donery, 113 E. Flores St.,&#13;
Tucson,&#13;
Arizona&#13;
Nina&#13;
Foster,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Everard&#13;
Hinshaw),&#13;
204 Forest Dr.,&#13;
Falls C hurch, Va.&#13;
Chas. Giddings, U nknown&#13;
Bertha Godfrey, 427 Ash Ave.,&#13;
Ames, Iowa&#13;
Pearl Graybil, U nknown&#13;
Ella Greenlee, Unknown&#13;
George Hanna, Unknown&#13;
George A. Hanna, U nknown&#13;
John Harman,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Edith Howarth, Unknown&#13;
Fred Howlett,&#13;
1429 Sun.,&#13;
Chico, California&#13;
Raymond Humphreys, U nknown&#13;
J. W. Erwin, RFD, Pierson , I owa&#13;
Mae&#13;
K ennedy,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Waler&#13;
Bushby), Ireton, Iowa&#13;
Edna Kline, 6547 37th Ave. S.&#13;
W., Seattle, Washington&#13;
Fred N . McCarthy, Unknown&#13;
William McKee, U nknown&#13;
Anna McQueen&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Samuel Langdell, U nknow n&#13;
Luella Marquart,&#13;
1802 Geor ge&#13;
St., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Marion&#13;
Metcalf, Deceased&#13;
Elsie Miller, (Mrs. Emery&#13;
M.&#13;
Johnson ) , 12 C hester Ave.,&#13;
Danville, Illinois&#13;
Myrta Millner,&#13;
(Mrs. E. C&#13;
Richards),&#13;
1 240 N. 21st St,&#13;
Salem, Oregon&#13;
Fred C. Mossmon. Marcus, Iowa&#13;
Anna Teresa Naughton. U nknown&#13;
Glen Pruden,&#13;
4509 Wolff,&#13;
Denver, Colorado&#13;
Way Reeder,&#13;
U nknown&#13;
Elmer Sadler, Unknown&#13;
George Search , Unknown&#13;
Walter Sloan,&#13;
2404 So. Cedar,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Maude S mock, Unknown&#13;
Sadie Van Horne, (Mrs. Charles&#13;
Harding). Deceased&#13;
Alice A. Wilcox,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
C. R. Yeager, 431 West Hill,&#13;
San Antonio 1 , Texas&#13;
1906&#13;
Estie Boddy, (Mrs. T. A .. Ware),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Asa L. Browe r, Deceased&#13;
Herbert J. Ca lkins, D eceased&#13;
Gertrude Crossan , (Mrs. J. W.&#13;
Kindig),&#13;
3800&#13;
Ridge Ave.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
F. V. Dubois,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Eva C. Erskine, (Mrs. W. H&#13;
Debenha m), 8 Country&#13;
Club&#13;
Rd. , Danville, Illinois&#13;
E . M. Everha rt, Deceased&#13;
Ruby A. Flinn,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Ruby&#13;
Vennink) , Deceased&#13;
o. Merrill Foote, 1503 E. Walnut&#13;
St., Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
Mary Gilbert, Deceased&#13;
Corwin Hartzell, Deceased&#13;
Lon Hawkins, Deceased&#13;
Ralph E. H eilman, Deceased&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson, 505 N. W&#13;
Wallula&#13;
Ave.,&#13;
Gresham, Ore.&#13;
James Kindig, Deceased&#13;
&#13;
Berthemia McCarthy,&#13;
3519 Vine&#13;
Ave.,&#13;
S iou x City, Iowa&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Geor ge E. Millner,&#13;
Ruby Trimble (Mrs. Wil l Haggith),&#13;
5433 Gollingwood&#13;
Dr,&#13;
Vancouver, B. C.&#13;
&#13;
Ernest&#13;
Wellemeyer&#13;
( Charles&#13;
City) , Deceased&#13;
J. J. Wellmeyer (Charles City),&#13;
Wyandotte High School,&#13;
Kansas City, Kansas&#13;
Roy Minkler,&#13;
609 9th St.,&#13;
Brookings, So. Dak.&#13;
John W. Wunn, U nknown&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Wilbur Allen, Unknown&#13;
Le Roy Anderson, Unknown&#13;
Ethel Annstrong, Unknown&#13;
Dora&#13;
Barlley,&#13;
(Mrs. Dora&#13;
Nichols), Unknown&#13;
Mary Elizabeth Bartlett, (Mrs.&#13;
Hunt),&#13;
2214 Cleveland Rd ,&#13;
Wooster, Ohio&#13;
Neva Bartlett, (Mrs. Clyde V .&#13;
Smithson), 229 11th Ave. N.,&#13;
Buhl, Idaho&#13;
Martha&#13;
Batcheller,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Wm. E . Batcheller, Unknown&#13;
Ada Beach, Unknown&#13;
Eva Beacham,&#13;
(Mrs. E. J . Merriman), Box 900,&#13;
Corpus Christi, Texas&#13;
Rena Booker, Unknown&#13;
Mary Katherine Brandow,&#13;
U nknown&#13;
Pearl Bowers, Unknown&#13;
Artimus B rower , 1242 Dakota&#13;
St. S., Huron, So. Dak.&#13;
Edith Burns, (Mrs. B. G. Barto),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Grace Currier , Deceased&#13;
Esthe r Fallein, U nknown&#13;
Fred Gilbert, Newburg, Oregon&#13;
Pearl&#13;
Gooch,&#13;
(Mrs Raymond&#13;
Wilson) , Sac City, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. Nellie Goodla nde r, Unknown&#13;
John Haafke , B r onson , Iowa&#13;
H a rrie t Hall (Mrs. F. J. Hagy),&#13;
4435 Dayton St.,&#13;
San Diego&#13;
1 5, California&#13;
Estella Harding, (Mrs. D. C.&#13;
Hall),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Martha Hargrave,&#13;
(Mrs. Ora&#13;
Gustin),&#13;
D eceased&#13;
Mamie Harrington, Unknown&#13;
Harvey Harrison, 3914 Lakeport&#13;
Rd., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ne ttie Hartzell,&#13;
(Mrs. Parks),&#13;
Akron, Col orado&#13;
James Havens, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Hay, Unknown&#13;
Lauretta Hileman, Unknown&#13;
L . W. Hiron s , Early, Iowa&#13;
Ammon Howarth. U nknown&#13;
John Howlett, Kanawha, Iowa&#13;
Robert Jones, Unknown&#13;
Ella Kamm, U nknown&#13;
Maude Keister,&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Anders&#13;
Jensen),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Geor ge Lamb, Unknown&#13;
Florence Lukins, Unknown&#13;
Pearl Mason , Deceased&#13;
Hugh May, Un kn own&#13;
Eunice Moore, Unknown&#13;
Stella Mu r phy, Unknown&#13;
Jessie Noble, Unknown&#13;
Ward Nor t h craft, Unknown&#13;
Arthur Omtvedt,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Gertrude Parker,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ray Patterson, Springfield, S. D&#13;
Beulah Peck,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Demia E. Peck,&#13;
Long Beach , California&#13;
Claren ce Peden, Deceased&#13;
Walden Pendell,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Frank Raw, Unknown&#13;
Adolf Scheel, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
�DIRECTORY&#13;
Edith Belle Search, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Sloan, (Mrs. E. L . Frost),&#13;
6551 Densmore,&#13;
Van Nuys, California&#13;
Claude Smith,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Nora Tadlock,&#13;
(Mrs . William&#13;
McEllath),&#13;
Moville, Iowa&#13;
Hieman Van Dyke, 3914 4th&#13;
Ave., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Edna&#13;
Webster,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Leslie&#13;
Frost),&#13;
7213 S. E . Durrison,&#13;
Portland, Oregon&#13;
Robert B . Wylie, Deceased&#13;
R. C. Young, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
John Charles Bass, Deceased&#13;
E. A. Bennet, Deceased&#13;
Nellie&#13;
Blood,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Corwin&#13;
Taylor),&#13;
Friendship Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Mary Mable Chamberlain,&#13;
(Mrs. Herbert Haight),&#13;
Hilger, Montana&#13;
Alice Cole, (Mrs. E . J. Wintersteen), Deceased&#13;
Stanley B. Collins, Deceased&#13;
Florence&#13;
Davidson, (Mrs. Perry&#13;
Bond) , Deceased&#13;
Leonia M. Delay, Deceased&#13;
Ella Dickson, (Mrs. P. L . Blackshire,,&#13;
205 Watson,&#13;
Fayetteville, Arkansas&#13;
Cora Frear, (Mrs. Lon Hawkins/&#13;
1850 Beacon, Eugene, Oregon&#13;
P . E. Fredendoll, Deceased&#13;
Earl James Fry, Deceased&#13;
H. E. Groom, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Haskins, (Mrs. Carl W.&#13;
Maynard),&#13;
317 Colorado,&#13;
Pueblo, Colorado&#13;
Genevieve Howard (Mrs. R. B.&#13;
Hayes),&#13;
324 So. 5th St.,&#13;
Platsmouth, Nebraska&#13;
H. E. Jones, Deceased&#13;
Ida Elsie Kilborne,&#13;
(Mrs. R. J. Cook)&#13;
Wessington Springs, So. Dak.&#13;
Wm. Henry Lease, Deceased&#13;
Clarence G. Manning, Deceased&#13;
William McCay, 332 Park Ave.,&#13;
Long Beach, California&#13;
Martha MacDonald,&#13;
(Mrs. J. V. McKelvey)&#13;
2117 Graeber St.,&#13;
Ames, Iowa&#13;
R . C. Nichols, Deceased&#13;
Chester F. Rissler, Deceased&#13;
Douglas Ford Robbins, Deceased&#13;
Glenn M. Squires, Deceased&#13;
Harry Nelson Staples, Deceased&#13;
Corwin Taylor, Friendship Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Henry C. Taylor, 1311 W. Laurel,&#13;
Independence, Kansas&#13;
Mabel Vesta Towner,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
J. Ray Tumbleson,&#13;
14974 Valley Vista Blvd.,&#13;
Sherman Oaks, California&#13;
Jay Whitaker, Deceased&#13;
Faith Foster Woodford, Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Alexander Adams,&#13;
3860 Crenshaw Blvd.,&#13;
Los Angeles 8, California&#13;
Dora Armour,&#13;
(Mrs. M.&#13;
L.&#13;
Sawyer) , 155 Massol Ave.,&#13;
Los Gatos, California&#13;
Persis A. Babcock, 302 Quimby&#13;
St., Ida Grove, Iowa&#13;
0. R. Boynton , Unknown&#13;
Harry Branton, 5511 Magnilia&#13;
Ave. , Riverside, California&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
Varena Brenner, Unknown&#13;
Mattie Bridenbaugh, (Mrs. L. P.&#13;
Ericksen), Deceased&#13;
George W. Bruce, 540 N. 15th&#13;
St., Salem, Oregon&#13;
Lora Butler, 224 26th Avenue,&#13;
San Francisco, California&#13;
Margaret Cable, Unknown&#13;
Carl Albert Carlson, Unknown&#13;
Paul Carson,&#13;
Box 202,&#13;
Morenci , Arizona&#13;
William H. Clary, Unknown&#13;
R. N. Claybough, Unknown&#13;
Rosella Clemons, Unknown&#13;
Nora Collins, Friendship Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Elmer Conoy, Laurens, Iowa&#13;
Ida Marinda Day, 3600 N. Main&#13;
St., Soquel, California&#13;
Philip E. DeGrielle, 212 W.&#13;
Okabena,&#13;
Worthington , Minn.&#13;
Hazel Deno , ( Mrs. Hazel Horton)&#13;
Box 252, Akron, Colorado&#13;
Glen Dugan,&#13;
1247 Vine, Abilene, Texas&#13;
Edna Gertrude Fish, (Mrs. Alois&#13;
W. Uhl), Unknown&#13;
Irene Griswold Fitz, (Mrs . Frank&#13;
Davis), Manson, Iowa&#13;
Pearl Foster, Unknown&#13;
Laura Foulds,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Osroe Charles Fuch,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Mabel Gibson, Unknown&#13;
Hazel Gooch, (Mrs. Fred Bauer)&#13;
Dixon, Illinois&#13;
Arthur Melbourne Gerber,&#13;
906 S. Cornelia, Sioux City, Ia&#13;
Fannie Hansen, Unknown&#13;
William L . Hay,&#13;
15805 N. E.&#13;
116th,&#13;
Redmond, Washington&#13;
Herbert C. Hayes,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Alfred Hinde, Early,&#13;
Iowa&#13;
Albert Lull Hollingsworth,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Sarah Lehman,&#13;
(Mrs. Dan Mosier&#13;
Box 267 , Penny Farms, Florida&#13;
Blanche Loomis, Unknown&#13;
Lowell Lucas, Unknown&#13;
Robert M. Luce, UnknownEmogene Lunde, Unknown&#13;
Carrie McCrory,&#13;
Box 114,&#13;
Duarte, California&#13;
Maurice E . McCurdy, Unknown&#13;
Robert R. McDougal, Unknown&#13;
Nellie Mathews, Unknown&#13;
Comart J. Mekkelson,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lottie E. Mitchell, (Mrs. M. L.&#13;
Peterson) ,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Lenard H. Morrill, Deceased&#13;
Charles T. Murray&#13;
P. 0. Box 413&#13;
Berryville, Arkansas&#13;
Mabel Nichols, Unknown&#13;
Alfred Olson, Unknown&#13;
Matholda Olson ,&#13;
(Mrs. Lorne&#13;
Smylie), Rock Rapids, Iowa&#13;
Myrtle Viola Osline, Unknown&#13;
Jay Vivian Patton, Unknown&#13;
Grace Peirce, Unknown&#13;
Homer J. Peirce, 314 Minehaha&#13;
Parkway,&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
George H. Peters, Unknown&#13;
Han R. Peterson, Unknown&#13;
Nettie Pierson, Unknown&#13;
Frank Pock, Unknown&#13;
P. Putnem, Unknown&#13;
Arthur D. Rahston, Unknown&#13;
Lillian Roelk, Unknown&#13;
Louise Sellooves, Unknown&#13;
Fred Schar, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
William B. Shoemaker,&#13;
Upham, No. Dakota&#13;
Frank Smock, Unknown&#13;
Bertha Steinhoff, Unknown&#13;
Pauline Steinhoff, Unknown&#13;
Nellie Swartz,&#13;
(Mrs. Earl D .&#13;
Hanna),&#13;
101 e. 31st St.,&#13;
Vancouver, Was hington&#13;
Gertrude Thompson,&#13;
(Mrs. W. S. Grant), Unknown&#13;
Gertrude Tucker,&#13;
(Mrs. M. J.&#13;
Fitzpatrick) ,&#13;
4135&#13;
Bachman&#13;
Place, San Diego, California&#13;
Alma Wells, (Mrs . Wm. Horton),&#13;
120 N. Madison,&#13;
Monrovia, California&#13;
Mabel&#13;
Williams,&#13;
(Mrs .&#13;
Ross&#13;
Clark) , 618 E. 5th St.,&#13;
Albert Lea, Minnesota&#13;
1908&#13;
T. C. Anderson,&#13;
5833 Osceola&#13;
Court,&#13;
Washington 16, D. C .&#13;
Florence&#13;
Clark,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Frank&#13;
Heilman), 1821 4th Ave. S.,&#13;
Anoka, Minnesota&#13;
Arthur Cushman, 2705 S. E.&#13;
River Rd.,. Portland, Oregon&#13;
Ethel Delmage, (Mrs. John Bass)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Martha M. Fair, 37629 Fremont&#13;
Blvd. , Fremont,&#13;
California&#13;
James E . Fitzgerald,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Ethel Jane Haskins, (Mrs. D.&#13;
Parnell Mahoney), 4323 Perry&#13;
Way, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Frank Heilman, 1821 4th Ave.,&#13;
Anoka, Minnesota&#13;
Clare D. Horner 241 15th St.,&#13;
Richmond, California&#13;
Blanche B. Johns,&#13;
530 Welch, Ames, Iowa&#13;
Lura Matteson, (Mrs . T. C. Anderson),&#13;
5833 Osceola Court,&#13;
Washington 16, D. C.&#13;
Mirah&#13;
Mills, Deceased&#13;
Charles A. Richards, Deceased&#13;
Harry J. Richards,&#13;
1520 Sherwood,&#13;
Sacramento 22, California&#13;
H. H . Sawyer,&#13;
Victoria Hotel,&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
G. U. Senn, Deceased&#13;
W. G. Waterman, 2318 34th St.,&#13;
Des Moines. Iowa&#13;
Blanche V. Watts, 317 W. 9th&#13;
St., Spencer, Iowa&#13;
Claire J. Westcott,&#13;
819 N. 17th&#13;
Boise, Idaho&#13;
Helen Wilson,&#13;
(Mrs. Joseph Dunwell),&#13;
3333 Bryant.&#13;
Palo Alto, California&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Charles Abbot, Unknown&#13;
Edna Antrim, Unknown&#13;
Hay Bedel,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
V. R. Beebe,&#13;
2814 Sennett,&#13;
Wichita 11, Kansas&#13;
Effie M. Brown, Unknown&#13;
Kate Brown, Unknown&#13;
Minnie Brown, (Mrs. Roy Heal),&#13;
1003 N. 3rd St.,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Roy B. Buck, Washta, Iowa&#13;
Emma Cain, (Mrs . Clarence Russell),&#13;
650 Harrison Ave.,&#13;
Claremont, California&#13;
Sarah E. Clark, 1130 Buchanan&#13;
St., San Francisco 14, Calif.&#13;
Bertha Ewer,&#13;
817 8th St.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�DIRECTORY&#13;
Eva L. Fair, 4338 Empress Ave. ,&#13;
Encino, California&#13;
Lillian Fege nsbush&#13;
(Mrs. Korneles Knudson)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Bessie Gi lm an, Unknown&#13;
Shirley Hackett, Smithland, Iowa&#13;
Marguerite Hall a m.&#13;
(Mrs. A.&#13;
Lyon Mathews). Unknown&#13;
Arthur Hansen, Unknown&#13;
Lionel C. Harrison, Unknown&#13;
Albert Arthur Hartzell, Unknown&#13;
Albert H. H eld, Hinton Iowa&#13;
David J. Hileman , Unknown&#13;
Dora Hoy, Unknown&#13;
J. A. Hutchins, Unknown&#13;
Blanche E. Johnson.&#13;
(Mrs. Arthur Cushman)&#13;
2705 S. E. River Road ,&#13;
Portland 22, Oregon&#13;
Martha Johnson, Unknown&#13;
Ernest W. McClelland. Unknown&#13;
Ethel McDougal&#13;
Mitchell, s. D.&#13;
August A. Malada, (Mr s Edwin&#13;
H. Armstrong), Ma pleton. Ia.&#13;
Susa Mateer, (Mrs. M. E. Peterson).&#13;
Hanly Fall, Minn esota&#13;
Floyd J. Melvin, Unknown&#13;
Rohert Montgomery&#13;
Chicago, Illinois&#13;
Author Moore. Unknown&#13;
C. H. Noffsinger, Unknown&#13;
Mary O'Farrell.&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Clarence Reeves, Unknown&#13;
Lillia Mae Rodine, Unknown&#13;
De Nora Skinne r&#13;
Sioux Rapids , Iowa&#13;
Norm a n Smith, Marcus, Iowa&#13;
Harry Squires, Unknown&#13;
Louise&#13;
&#13;
Sparks.&#13;
&#13;
Unknown&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Welch, Mapleton Iowa&#13;
Emmett Wintermantel&#13;
Elkhart, Iowa&#13;
1909&#13;
Frederick&#13;
&#13;
Backemeyer&#13;
&#13;
57 East 38th St.. Apt. 104&#13;
Indianapolis 5 Indiana&#13;
Jeanette Bartlett,&#13;
(Mrs . Homer&#13;
Thompson),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
A. R. Bastian&#13;
Edgemont, So. Dakota&#13;
Jennie B. Bridenbaugh,&#13;
253 P lymouth Dr.&#13;
Pasadena,California&#13;
P ercy W. Brown. 24 W. 20th St ..&#13;
Eugene, Oregon&#13;
Edwin M . Brown&#13;
De Leon Springs, Florida&#13;
Paul H Collins,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Zula Correll&#13;
(Mrs. Percy Brown), Unknown&#13;
John R. Dav&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Mae Fry. (Mrs. J. H. Bowman)&#13;
Rt. 2. Box 281, Mount, Minn.&#13;
Mary Alice Holman. (Mrs. John&#13;
B. Swinney)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Walter Johnson,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Waldo S . Johnston,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Idabelle Lewis, (Mrs. W. A.&#13;
Main), 253 Plymouth Drive&#13;
Pasadena&#13;
&#13;
6, California&#13;
&#13;
Alvah L. Miller&#13;
Brookfield. Conn.&#13;
Ethel R. Murray, Deceased&#13;
0. Walter Rest, 8215 So. Merrill&#13;
Ave., Chica go 17, Illinnois&#13;
Silas Rorem, 1453 Dorothy Drive&#13;
Glendale 2, California&#13;
Julia Royse, 2329 Hoyt St. ,&#13;
Muskegon Heights, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
Blanche M. Spratt,&#13;
1340 Morningside Ave.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Martha Swem, Deceas ed&#13;
Kath e rine Tackaberry&#13;
(Mrs. Will H . Orr) , Deceased&#13;
Ida Ullman&#13;
(Mrs. Edwin M. Brown)&#13;
De Leon Springs. Florida&#13;
Elsie Weary&#13;
(Mrs. Barne tt Farrell)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
May Welch, (Mrs. Moats)&#13;
509 N. Garfield,&#13;
Eagle Grove, Iowa&#13;
J. S. Wendell&#13;
17310 Wildemere St.,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
Clara E. Wolcott&#13;
Spirit Lake , Iowa&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Eva Adams (Mrs. Eva Christy)&#13;
4516 Morningside Ave. ,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Emma Minerva Batcheller,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Maud neaton , Castana, Iowa&#13;
Chas. Alfred Beers&#13;
1014, Quarrier St.,&#13;
Charleston. W. Va.&#13;
Bard L eRoy Bevington, Unknown&#13;
Madge Bridenbaugh , (Mrs. Harry&#13;
Cox), 207 Artaban Apts.,&#13;
Long Beach, California&#13;
Cleveland Falsom Brooks&#13;
Platte, So. Dakota&#13;
Viola Croston. (Mrs . B. F. Held)&#13;
Hinton, Iowa&#13;
Dora Currier&#13;
(Mrs. Dora Holman)&#13;
R. R.. Hinton , Iowa&#13;
Agnes Ewer, (Mrs. C. A. Hunt)&#13;
11207 109th Lane No&#13;
Largo, Florida&#13;
Bertha Felber.&#13;
(Mrs. 0. F.&#13;
Petterson) , 503 N. Heathdale,&#13;
Covina, California&#13;
Claude A. Ferguson, Unknown&#13;
Logan A. Forkner. Unknown&#13;
Silas Forkner. Unknown&#13;
Maude Inez Fox&#13;
(Mrs. Ernest F. Goff)&#13;
Valier, Montana.&#13;
Matilda Frauen. (Mrs. Lionel&#13;
Stanley) ,&#13;
647 Elm&#13;
El Cerrito, California&#13;
Rena Mae Furley, Unknown&#13;
Gladys G. Garretson. (Mrs. B. J .&#13;
Hyink). 1229 N. Graynold&#13;
Glendale, California&#13;
Hattie Mae Gilbert,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Johanna Granning&#13;
(Mrs . U . S. Baxter).&#13;
- - Ryan. Iowa&#13;
Edward Greynold, Unknown&#13;
Luella Haakinson,&#13;
(Mrs. Frank&#13;
Pock). Unknown&#13;
Louise Hammond, (Mrs . Aylmer&#13;
Bushby).&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lura Hanna, (Mrs. Ward Hannah), Deceased&#13;
Leo C. Harrison, Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
Maude S. Haskell, (Mrs . George&#13;
Eveleth), Salix, Iowa&#13;
Ben Held, Hinton , Iowa&#13;
Nettie Fry Heiler, (Mrs. Fred&#13;
Seaver) ,&#13;
522 Halt Ave.,&#13;
Winter Park . Florida&#13;
Edw. Nelson Himmel, Unknown&#13;
Lonnie Jones, Deceased&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Kennicott&#13;
Hilton&#13;
Unknown&#13;
May Alice Malada, Unknown&#13;
Olive E . Mauger,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Myrtle E. Mercuere,&#13;
Mrs. Sm. L.&#13;
Smith) , Deceased&#13;
Fred W. Miller, U nknown&#13;
Le Onie May Nayler&#13;
(Mrs. Clarence Baynton),&#13;
2523 So. Main. Burlington, Ia.&#13;
Bridget O'Farrel,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Arthur Patton,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ida Mae Ping, Unknown&#13;
Walter Gregg Pitkin&#13;
Howe, Indiana&#13;
Marguerite Pittinger, (Mrs . L. B.&#13;
Iliff). Unknown&#13;
Elery L. Pratt, 1063 Montagne&#13;
Dunlap, Iowa&#13;
G. C. Saue r . Hartley, Iowa&#13;
Maude Estella Schaeffer&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ruby Frances Shambough&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Raymond E. Smith, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Snell , Unknown&#13;
David Livingston Soltan&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Theodore S. Soltan. Unknown&#13;
Oliver C. Terry, Unknown&#13;
Alfred Thornton, Unknown&#13;
Mike Tracy,&#13;
Bradford Hotel&#13;
Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
1910&#13;
Laurance J. Belt&#13;
Wheatland, Wyoming&#13;
Allen P. B e rkstresser, Deceased&#13;
J. H. Brid enbaugh, 1109 N. 32nd&#13;
St., Billings, Montana&#13;
Daisy Chamberlain, 330 So. 18th.&#13;
Lincoln, Nebraska&#13;
R. L. Chapman, Deecased&#13;
Grace Chase&#13;
(Mrs. A . G. Hinshaw)&#13;
Summerdale, Alabama&#13;
Evelyn Denkman,&#13;
(Mrs E . J.&#13;
Lester) , Armour, So. Dakota&#13;
Jessie William Doolittl e&#13;
326 W . Forest Ave.,&#13;
Wheaton, Illinois&#13;
George Eggleston .&#13;
805 W. 9th&#13;
St., Vinton , Iowa&#13;
Irvin A. Engle , 14 W. Central&#13;
Ave.. Los Ga tos . California&#13;
Hattie Gabri elson&#13;
(Mrs. H. Lidva ll)&#13;
1105 3 rd St., Boon e, Iowa&#13;
Nevada M. Hall&#13;
(Mrs. K enne t h Squires)&#13;
Colo. Iowa&#13;
Harry S. Hamilton , Deceased&#13;
Joseph E. Jeffrey&#13;
132 North St., Milford, Conn.&#13;
Ethel Johnson&#13;
Deceased&#13;
L. R. Keckle r , Deceased&#13;
Clara L. Lockin . (Mrs. Charles&#13;
Blankenship), Deceased&#13;
Elizabeth McConkey, Deceased&#13;
Me rton C. McConkey Deceased&#13;
Janet MacDonald&#13;
598 N. Main St..&#13;
Franklin . Indiana&#13;
Chas. E. Magoun, Deceased&#13;
L. T. Mitchell. 209 19th N. E. ,&#13;
Cedar Rapids Iowa&#13;
Harland L Mos sman Deceased&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Goodsell Pendell,&#13;
Orli e G. Prichard, 1432 Wilson.&#13;
Des Mo ines Iowa&#13;
Lilii e M. Rodine&#13;
(Mrs. S. F.&#13;
Holaday),&#13;
727 Merritt&#13;
St. ,&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
&#13;
�DIRECTORY&#13;
Webster City, I owa&#13;
Maude A. Rodine, (Mrs. C. H.&#13;
H a wbaker) ,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Grace Rorem, (Mrs. Douglas F ord&#13;
R obbins),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Guy S. S tiles, 3819 Pet e rs Ave.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Jessie F. Squires, (Mrs. Matthew&#13;
Schon).&#13;
Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
Lucile Warnock&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
S. 0 .&#13;
Ro rem) . 1453 Dorothy Drive&#13;
Gl endale, California&#13;
Sara Wolcott,&#13;
(Mrs. Frank&#13;
C.&#13;
Brown) ,&#13;
3521 56th.,&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
May Wood , (Mrs. Wm. Kixm ille r)&#13;
789 Michigan Ave.,&#13;
Willmette, Illi nois&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
J. B. Ackman,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Floyd W. Angenbaugh&#13;
Esmond, So. Da kota&#13;
Clinton D. Arms&#13;
614 B a ltimore. Waterloo, Iowa&#13;
Robert H. Ba ker , Oto, I owa&#13;
Iva n L. Ba rkley, Unknown&#13;
Mary Be kins, Unknown&#13;
Gertrude V. B ingha m, Unknown&#13;
Irwin Ray Bingham,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Maybelle Brown,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
George Byron Brush,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Edith Burton, (Mrs . R. C. Fulton),&#13;
Milford, Iowa&#13;
Ma r y Susan Clifford. Unknown&#13;
Howa rd T. Cobbs&#13;
Marathon, Iowa&#13;
Earl T. Corwin, U nknown&#13;
Ruth Dale, (Mrs . Loren Brown)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Hattie E. Doebl e r, Unknown&#13;
Mary Feige, Unknown&#13;
Alfred D . Forkner, Unknown&#13;
John P. Fulkrod,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Roy Gellatly, Unknown&#13;
H omer B. Geyer, U nknown&#13;
Minnie M. Glanzman.&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Roy M. Gorde r , U nknown&#13;
H erbe rt Gray,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Lulu H askell&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Frank Taylor ), Unknown&#13;
James Fuller H askins .&#13;
1411 S.&#13;
Mulberry, Siou x City, Iowa&#13;
Maude H atter, Unknown&#13;
Mar y Frances Hayden, U nknown&#13;
Ina Alida H eeren.&#13;
315 W. 7th&#13;
S t ., Wayne, Nebraska&#13;
Jewell.&#13;
(Mrs. B . H.&#13;
Mabel&#13;
H a ynes ),&#13;
St. James Minn.&#13;
Nellie Kindig, Unknown&#13;
Chester C. King, Laurens, Iowa&#13;
Mary Lanyon, ( Mrs. William S.&#13;
Fry) .&#13;
211 W. Walnut,&#13;
San Diego 3 , California&#13;
Belle La rson . Unknown&#13;
Olive Larson,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Willia m Dwigh t Lela nd, Unknown&#13;
Edith May L ittell, Mrs. Arthur&#13;
Bottom) ,&#13;
903 45th ,&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
Doris Lukes, Unkn own&#13;
Gertrude Lukes, Unknown&#13;
Nell Mirandia McCallum,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Arilla Myrtie P hillips, Unknown&#13;
E . J . Plumme r. Marcus, I owa&#13;
Roy Winston Richards, Unknown&#13;
Anna My r tle Ricke r, Unknown&#13;
Jeanette Muriel Riddlesbarger&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Mabel E. Riedesell, U nknown&#13;
&#13;
50&#13;
&#13;
Edith&#13;
Rogers&#13;
(Mrs. H. A. Shoemaker)&#13;
1107 Walnut. Yankton, S. Da k.&#13;
E ls ie Ophelia Stevens, Unknown&#13;
Hazel Strickling, (Mrs. Bertra m&#13;
Ia.&#13;
Leonard),&#13;
Correctionville,&#13;
Harriet E . Torbet, U nknown&#13;
Cathe rine Ann Trieschman&#13;
Unknown&#13;
1911&#13;
Alice Lou ise Ande rson&#13;
(Mrs. J. 0 . McKinsey)&#13;
4000 Cathedral Avenue, N. W.&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
Lancelot S. Anderson, Deceased&#13;
Edward&#13;
Bachemeye r, Deceased&#13;
Bess Barnes. (Mrs. A. B. Bolte )&#13;
4 7 Groveland Terr ace&#13;
Minneapolis, Minnesota&#13;
Harriett Bass ,( Mrs. R. C. Helfenstein) , Deceased&#13;
J. Howard Be rkstresser&#13;
1710 Number 306 Makiki St. ,&#13;
Honolulu 14, Hawaii&#13;
Ivan Bloom . (Mrs. Byron Ben&#13;
Boyd ),&#13;
445 Arenas Street,&#13;
La Jolla, California&#13;
Ida A . Brown,&#13;
( Mrs . Clark R&#13;
1958 No. Main .&#13;
McClelland),&#13;
Fremont, Neb raska&#13;
Elizabeth Bruene, Deceased&#13;
F. H . Chandler,&#13;
Nielson Hotel,&#13;
Dennison, Iow a&#13;
Charles F. Cushma n ,&#13;
1124 Dupon t Bldg.,&#13;
Miami,&#13;
&#13;
Florida&#13;
&#13;
La ura Cushman&#13;
592 N. E . 60th S treet,&#13;
Miami,&#13;
&#13;
Florid a&#13;
&#13;
Edith M. Eicher,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Ni na Farnham, Deceased&#13;
Anne Goodchild , Deceased&#13;
N. L . Hackett, Deceased&#13;
H. C. Harpe r, Deceased&#13;
Victor J . Hays, Deceased&#13;
Frances Horn,&#13;
Nielson Hotel,&#13;
D en n ison , Iowa&#13;
H. H . H udson&#13;
Titusville, Florida&#13;
Eben S. Johnson, Deceased&#13;
Talma Kitchen,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Dav id F. Loepp, Deceased&#13;
Ethel Lynch&#13;
25 A K endall Street.&#13;
Redlands,&#13;
Califo rnia&#13;
Etta Mahood, Deceased&#13;
Mabel McCrerry, (Mrs. A. O.&#13;
Becker ) .&#13;
Wadena, Minnesota&#13;
Vivia n McFa rla nd. (M.rs. R. J.&#13;
McGee) , 1650 Dayton A venue,&#13;
S t. Paul, Minnesota&#13;
Cora McKellip, (Mrs. Fred Sharman),&#13;
1931 Plamestron Pl.,&#13;
Hollywood , California&#13;
Arthur H. Meyer, Deceased&#13;
Jennie Nelson&#13;
(Mrs. J . H. Bridenba ugh )&#13;
1109 N. 22n d Street,&#13;
Billings, Mon tana&#13;
Edna E. Randolph,&#13;
1723 Ross&#13;
Street,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Laura&#13;
Shumway, (Mrs. L. T.&#13;
Mitchell ), 209 19t h N. E .,&#13;
Cedar Rapids, Iowa&#13;
Pearl Snyder&#13;
(Mrs. H. Van Gorde r )&#13;
3123 49 Avenue Nor t h&#13;
St. Petersburg, Florida&#13;
Mar y Thoburn&#13;
(Mrs. Harr y West)&#13;
&#13;
Bay Minette, Alaba ma&#13;
H . T rimble, Deceased&#13;
W. W. Waymack, Deceased&#13;
R u t h Wa lle meyer&#13;
(Mrs. Clarence Melcher)&#13;
3657 Sawtelle Bl vd.&#13;
Los Angeles, Calif ornia&#13;
Lola Westcott,&#13;
819 No. 17th ,&#13;
Boise, Ida h o&#13;
Maria Wiese, Hull, Iowa&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
He rbert Leroy Bilsborough&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Alice E dit h Blake, U nknown&#13;
Francis Edward Bleakley&#13;
205 1/2W. 6th Street,&#13;
Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
Edna L ucille Boulden, Unknown&#13;
Albe r t B oysen, Unknown&#13;
Ernest Boysen,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Elmer Preston Bradshaw&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Sylvia Annette Bradshaw&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Helen Brown&#13;
(Mrs. W. P. Stephen son )&#13;
192 R avensw ood .&#13;
Menlo Park. California&#13;
Ulysses Be r yne Collins . Deceased&#13;
N ina Mae Clark&#13;
.&#13;
(Mrs Nina Mae Notestine)&#13;
c/o Houstons Nursing Home&#13;
Humboldt, Iowa&#13;
Harold James Currier . U nknown&#13;
Albe r t H. Digerness, Unknown&#13;
Bertha Mae Eads,&#13;
Mrs . Floyd&#13;
Opwick ).&#13;
Unk nown&#13;
Howard Erickson,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
R obert B urton Fearing, Unknow n&#13;
Florence Ethel Fletcher&#13;
(Mrs. G. B . K in ney)&#13;
Ocheyedon . Iowa&#13;
.&#13;
EthelynEdna Fosburg, Unknown&#13;
Lewis Fry,&#13;
2600 Calvert,&#13;
Lincoln 2. Nebraska&#13;
Harley Hayes Gill , 608 Flood&#13;
Bldg. .. San Francisco, California&#13;
Ruth Alice Goodrich,&#13;
Unknow n&#13;
F lore nce Maude Gorder, U nknown&#13;
Mary Graham, Brainard, Minn.&#13;
Hiram Gay Albee, U nknown&#13;
Minnie Au gusta Bar tel. Unknown&#13;
Phoebe Benbow,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Leonora Frede rica Granzow&#13;
(Mrs. Wilson )&#13;
4442 D awson Avenue,&#13;
San Diego, California&#13;
Mariee Grootes&#13;
(Mrs. B loem ) ,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Anbrey Chester Grubb, Unknown&#13;
Lillia n Lucretia H amomnd&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lloyd Herbert Hamren, Unknown&#13;
Paulina Louise Hanner&#13;
(Mrs. Ora G. Smi t h )&#13;
Rt. 2. Hornick, I owa&#13;
Cvrus Hansen, U nknown&#13;
Walter Bennett Hay, Unknown&#13;
Genevieve Hinde,&#13;
304 N. E . 23rd&#13;
Street, Miami, Florida&#13;
Helen Josephone Holman&#13;
(Mrs. Harry Schott)&#13;
Los Angeles, Cal ifornia&#13;
L loyd W. Johnson&#13;
1021 l st Avenue S. E ,&#13;
LeMars, Iowa&#13;
Ira Andre Jones,&#13;
U nknown&#13;
Fabius Clarke Lavender&#13;
Eagle Butte, Sou th Da kota&#13;
Box 293&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
�DIRECTORY&#13;
Paul Wesley McElwain, Unknown&#13;
Dean Paul McKaig, Unknown&#13;
Edith Mead, Unknown&#13;
Hugh H . Mille r, Mapleton, Iowa&#13;
Thomas Molesworth, Unknown&#13;
Ray Douglas Robbins&#13;
Clear L a ke, Iowa&#13;
Elsie Sophia Rodine, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
Clyde Rogers,&#13;
15 Furney St.,&#13;
Wenatchee, Washington&#13;
Raymond Willard Rogers&#13;
1624 Elmhurst&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Edna Schmidt,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ulrich Senn,&#13;
411 East Mason&#13;
Milwaukee 2, Wisconsin,&#13;
Annie Adeline Shedd, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
Birdie Bea Smith, Unknown&#13;
Charles Garnet Trimble, Unknown&#13;
Bessie A. Wenbourne&#13;
Meckling, South Dakota&#13;
Emma Zimmerman&#13;
426 Sherman Avenue&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
�THE MORNINGSIDER&#13;
A. W . Buckingham ----- Public R elations&#13;
Louis Croston -------- - - ----- -- -- Editor&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Sioux City, Iowa as&#13;
Second Class Matter under Act of Congress, August&#13;
&#13;
24, 1912. Published four times a year in September,&#13;
December, March and June by Morningside college,&#13;
Sioux City 6. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Prospective Morningsiders&#13;
If you know of a young man or woman who is the kind of&#13;
perso n you would want to attend Morn ings ide, please fill out this&#13;
form an d mail to the alumni office.&#13;
&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
&#13;
Exch.&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
State&#13;
&#13;
High School&#13;
Graduation Date&#13;
Major Field of Interest&#13;
&#13;
Month&#13;
&#13;
Year _____&#13;
&#13;
No.&#13;
&#13;
�</text>
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                    <text>Morningsider: Volume 20, Number 02 (1961-12)</text>
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                    <text>Beckmann, Danielle: Creator</text>
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                    <text>The Morningsider was a monthly newsletter that Morningside College sent to Alumni to keep them informed about what was happening on campus and in the lives of other alumni. The Morningsider Volume 20, Number 02 was published for the month of December in 1961.&#13;
&#13;
This issue is torn along the binding. </text>
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                    <text>The President's Pen- pg. 2&#13;
On the Cover- pg. 2&#13;
The Morningsider- pg. 2&#13;
Beauty and Charm Reign at Homecoming- pg. 3&#13;
Morningside College Alumni Association Officers and Board Homecoming 1961 to Homecoming 1962- pg. 4&#13;
Alumni Officers- pg. 4&#13;
Executive Committee- pg. 4&#13;
Alumni Trustee- pg. 4&#13;
"M" Club- pg. 5&#13;
Homecoming 1961- pg. 6&#13;
New International House- pg. 7&#13;
International House Opens- pg. 7&#13;
Article By Professor Eidsmoe in Isea Midland Schools and Johper- pg. 9&#13;
Parents on Campus, Dec. 2- pg. 9&#13;
1961 Football Season Highlights- pg. 10&#13;
Basketball Season- pg. 11&#13;
Heiman Van Dyke Honored In Hall of Fame- pg. 11&#13;
James Juvenal Hayes Dies in Pennsylvania- pg. 12&#13;
Morningside Participates In Three Speech Tourneys- pg. 12&#13;
Professor and Family Study, Tour Europe- pg. 13&#13;
3100 Musicians on Campus for Band Day- pg. 13&#13;
Morningside Faculty Piano Team Plays at Yankton- pg. 13&#13;
Shaw's "Arms and the Man" Sponsored By Morningside- pg. 13&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Gives Jazz Concert- pg. 13&#13;
Poet Editor Speaks At Morningside- pg. 13&#13;
Foreign Film Series By Student Council- pg. 14&#13;
Fall Enrollment Figures- pg. 14&#13;
Counseling Representative On Campus- pg. 14&#13;
Kucinski Guest Conductor at Fredonia, N. Y. Concert- pg. 14&#13;
Chemical Society Meets At Morningside- pg. 14&#13;
20th Annual Superintendent's Conference Held- pg. 15&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Receives Province VI Award- pg. 15&#13;
New Faculty- pg. 15&#13;
Religious Groups Hold Retreats- pg. 15&#13;
Conduct European Tour- pg. 15&#13;
Footing The Bill- pg. 16-17&#13;
Gift From Insurance Firm Recognizes Morningside's Contribution To Industry- pg. 18&#13;
Music Department Presents Combined Concert- pg. 18&#13;
Dr. Bauer Honored- pg. 18&#13;
Faculty-Student Reception Held- pg. 18&#13;
Alumni Recognized For Service- pg. 19&#13;
'16 Grad Lauded In Dallas- pg. 19&#13;
Re-Elected To Des Moines Board of Education- pg. 19-20&#13;
Verl Crow '34 Cover Subject of Magazine- pg. 20&#13;
Francis Kingsbury Honored- pg. 20&#13;
Charlotte Ressegieu Resigns After Long Service- pg. 20&#13;
Language Laboratory To Be Installed- pg. 21&#13;
Leon Hickman On Panel At Columbia- pg. 21&#13;
Morningside Alumnus Part Of Music Program In Omaha Schools- pg. 21&#13;
New York- pg. 22&#13;
Washington- pg. 23&#13;
Grammer Girl Reunion- pg. 23&#13;
Des Moines- pg. 24&#13;
Philadelphia- pg. 26&#13;
Omaha- pg. 26&#13;
Florida- pg. 26&#13;
Minneapolis- pg. 27&#13;
Morningside Authors- pg. 28-29&#13;
Longhorns Bring Culture- pg. 28&#13;
New Horizons For Management- pg. 28-29&#13;
The Legacy For Hiroshima- pg. 29&#13;
Manual For Law Stenographers- pg. 29&#13;
Adelia MacBeth Retires- pg. 29&#13;
Alumni Give $54,386 In Fund Year Ending July 31, 1961- pg. 30&#13;
Living Endow. Starts 21st Year- pg. 30&#13;
Class Of 1915 First In Participation- pg. 30&#13;
Class Of 1911 In 2nd Place- pg. 30&#13;
Participation By Classes- pg. 31&#13;
Participation By States- pg. 31&#13;
Living Endowment- pg. 32&#13;
Average Living Endowment Gift Is $13.18- pg. 32&#13;
Alumni Give $54,386.25 In Year Ending July 31- pg. 32&#13;
Abby Easter Seal Chairman- pg. 32&#13;
Stan Greigg Elected To City Council- pg. 32&#13;
Living Endowment- pg. 33-37&#13;
Alumni Represent College At Inaugrals- pg. 38&#13;
Morningsider Working On Moon Craft- pg. 38&#13;
"Grandma" Of The Nursery- pg. 38&#13;
Rev. Jack D. Eales To New York Church- pg. 38&#13;
In Memoriam- pg. 39-40&#13;
"Wee Morningsiders"- pg. 40-41&#13;
Weddings- pg. 41&#13;
Class Notes- pg. 41-45&#13;
Will He Keep Or Hand Off?- pg. 45&#13;
Directory- pg. 46-51&#13;
Prospective Morningsiders- pg. 52</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="26454">
              <text>THE MORNINGSIDER is the official alumni publication of Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
December 1961&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
PRESI DENT'S&#13;
PEN&#13;
&#13;
At the fall meeting of the Board of&#13;
Trustees of Morningside College I persented a program on Wills and E states.&#13;
The Board adopted this program with the&#13;
thought that it should be immediately put&#13;
into operation. I want to explain this program briefly to you and ask you for your&#13;
support and assistance.&#13;
There will be quarterly mailings to a&#13;
select group of at least 1,000 individuals&#13;
which we hope will motivate them to ask&#13;
for additional information which will tell&#13;
them how they can retain the use of their&#13;
money and yet save tax dollars by including&#13;
Morningside College in their estate planning.&#13;
Despite the constantly increasing number of wealthy individuals, relatively few&#13;
are being motivated to give to tax exempt&#13;
organizations. Apparently people of wealth&#13;
don't realize how little it costs to make such&#13;
bequest s. In 1959 slightly more than 5%&#13;
of t he gross estates were bequeathed to all&#13;
tax exempt organizations in the United&#13;
States,&#13;
which shows an evidence of neglect&#13;
on the part of people in leaving their&#13;
estates to needy causes, such as the church&#13;
and college. We must see that the peop, e&#13;
!&#13;
are inf,o rmed.&#13;
What I am asking you to do at this time&#13;
is furnish us with names and information&#13;
about individuals in your community, possibly members of your church or others in&#13;
the community that would be interested in&#13;
Morningside College. They should be of&#13;
sufficient means that they would to able to&#13;
leave enough income to take care of their&#13;
family and other local interest s but still be&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
capable of giving to Morningside through&#13;
a Will.&#13;
Twenty years from now, the only churchrelated non-tax-supported&#13;
college still&#13;
carrying on a respectable educational program, will be those institutions which are&#13;
building significant endowment programs&#13;
today.&#13;
J. Richard Palmer&#13;
&#13;
ON THE COVER&#13;
Groundbreaking&#13;
&#13;
exercises&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
new Student Center were held Friday,&#13;
October 20, of Homecoming&#13;
&#13;
weekend.&#13;
&#13;
Shown holding the spade of upturned&#13;
soil from the site, is President Emeritus&#13;
&#13;
Earl A. Roadman. Others from left to&#13;
·right are President J. Richard Palmer,&#13;
Al Buckingham, Director of Public Relations and Athletic Director, David W .&#13;
Stewart, President of the Board of&#13;
Trustees, Steve Pohlman, president of&#13;
the student body, Dave Otto, student&#13;
council member,&#13;
&#13;
Alan&#13;
&#13;
Stone, student&#13;
&#13;
council member, and Harold Poppen,&#13;
admission's counselor.&#13;
&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDER&#13;
A. W. Buck ingham ___ __ Public R elations&#13;
Louis Croston ---- - -------- --- ___ Editor&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Sioux City, Iowa as&#13;
Second Class Matter under Act of Congress, August&#13;
24. 1912 . Published four times a year in September.&#13;
Decem ber, March and Ju ne by Morningside college.&#13;
Sioux City 6, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
VOL. XX&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDER&#13;
December, 1961&#13;
&#13;
N o. 2&#13;
&#13;
From left to right: Diane Bushyager, Elaine Arveson, Kay Pech, Queen Nancy Drommer,&#13;
Judy Marsh, Jean Long, Sonja Goetsch.&#13;
&#13;
BEAUTY AND CHARM&#13;
REIGN AT HOMECOMING&#13;
Miss Nancy Drommer of Pomeroy, Iowa&#13;
was elected the 1961 Homecoming Queen.&#13;
the coronation took place in Alle Gymnasium at the annual homecoming dance Friday evening, October 20th. The Queen's&#13;
attendants were Elaine Arveson, Hornick&#13;
Iowa; Sonja Goetsch, Lu Verne, Iowa; Jean&#13;
Long, Fort Dodge, Iowa; Kay Pech, LeMars,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa; and J udy Marsh and Diane Bushyager of Sioux City.&#13;
Nancy is a senior and majoring in m usic&#13;
education. She is a member of the student&#13;
council, band, choir, Mu Phi E psilon music&#13;
sorority, and has served as president of the&#13;
women's dormitory.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION&#13;
Officers and Board&#13;
Homecoming 1961 to Homecoming 1962&#13;
Alumni Officers&#13;
Presi dent ___________ Dean Harrington&#13;
Pres. Elect ____________ James Fowler&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Mi ldred Wikert Wallman '4 1&#13;
La Donna Rispalje Preston '53&#13;
Secretary ___ _____ ___ Ruth Elliott Jones&#13;
Treasurer _____ __________ _ Ira Gwinn&#13;
&#13;
'51&#13;
'53&#13;
&#13;
'46&#13;
'22&#13;
&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
Don Stone '5 1&#13;
Don Kelsey '49&#13;
Don Severeide '42&#13;
C. C. (Cap) Maddison '28&#13;
Mrs. R. H. M cBride '17&#13;
Robert Eidsmoe '52&#13;
Chet Josl in '51&#13;
Alumni Trustee&#13;
Hon ie Rogers '25&#13;
Virgil Gerkin '21&#13;
Lowell Crippen '30&#13;
Richard King '41&#13;
Donald Preston ' 51&#13;
&#13;
From left to right, new officers present&#13;
for a picture were Jim Fowler, Don Preston,&#13;
Mildred Wikert Wallman , LaDonna Rispalje&#13;
Preston, and Dean Harrington .&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Don Stone ('50), 1960-61 president of the&#13;
Morningside Alumni Association .r eceives a&#13;
plaque for his year of fine service, from the&#13;
new President Dean Harrington '51. Dean&#13;
is Terminal manager of the Premier Trucking&#13;
Service Company and Mrs. Harrington is the&#13;
former Chris Booz '49.&#13;
The new president assumed his duties for&#13;
the year 1961-62 after being installed at&#13;
the annual Homecoming dinner.&#13;
&#13;
Jean Woodford Stone, ('45), Don Stone,&#13;
('51 ), Chris Booz Harrington, Dean Harrington '51, LaDonna Rispalje Preston '53, Don&#13;
Preston '51.&#13;
&#13;
"M" CLUB&#13;
The food line at the "M" Club lunc,heon&#13;
gets rapt attention from the "first in line".&#13;
Recognizable in the photo are Merle Shafenberg '21 of Hinton, Dwight Hauff '28, of&#13;
Sioux City, Bud Brockm. n, Coach, Max&#13;
a&#13;
Hughes . . 28 and Darrell Murray '59.&#13;
&#13;
We don't remember if in this picture&#13;
Nathan "Rabbit" Goldberg '30 is bowing,&#13;
getting up, or in the process of sitting down.&#13;
At any rate Harold "Buck" Bollman '35 is&#13;
amused. Bob Hansen is displaying the "Obe"&#13;
Wenig Memo·rial Plaque. This plaque, in&#13;
memory of Obe Wenig, all time great athlete&#13;
and former coach at Morningside, has spaces&#13;
for the next twenty years for the names of&#13;
t,hose men chosen by t.he coaching staff as&#13;
the most improved basketball player each&#13;
year. Bob Hansen '51 was the "M" Club&#13;
luncheon chairman.&#13;
&#13;
Russell "Pete" Knudsen '27, and Charlie&#13;
Bach '27 were recipients of "M" Club blankets at the luncheon. Knudsen and Bach&#13;
were star .h alf-backs for Morningside. Knudsen first presented a blanket to Bach and&#13;
after accepting, Bach presented one to Knudsen.&#13;
Knudsen is Superintendent of the Natural&#13;
Gas Pipe Line Plant at Dakota City, Nebraska;&#13;
and Bach is manager for Sears and Co. of the&#13;
Minneapolis area stores.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
HOMECOMING 1961&#13;
Homecoming 1961 was a colorful event&#13;
on the campus O ctober 20th a nd 21st. Events&#13;
started Thursday evening with th e traditional&#13;
bon fire on Bass Field, c rowning of the freshman queen a nd a pep rally.&#13;
Ground breaking ceremonies for the new&#13;
Student Center were h eld Friday morning at&#13;
the convocation hour, followed by the annua l&#13;
alumni workshop. ( see page 8 )&#13;
Friday evening following the alumni workshop, a dinner was h eld at Grace Church,&#13;
open to a lumni and faculty. The speaker was&#13;
R a lph Beerman ( ' 35 ) of D akota City, Nebraska republican representative in the U nited&#13;
States Congress.&#13;
The annual Homecoming dance a nd coronation of Miss Morningside, 1961 was he ld&#13;
Friday evening in Allee Gymnasium. Darrel&#13;
Warner a nd his orchestra provided the music.&#13;
Nancy Drommer of Pomeroy, I owa was&#13;
crowned Queen by Presiden t P alme r. Morningside's tradition is tha t the identity of the&#13;
Queen be kept secret until the actua l moment&#13;
of the coronation. Male students only are allowed to vote.&#13;
Saturday morning's feature was the p a rade.&#13;
As is now the custom, it formed for a p erformance at the east end of Morningside Avenue, proceeds to C ecelia P ark and reassembles in downtown Sioux Ci ty to parad e th ere.&#13;
At noon on Sa turday the "M" C lub luncheon was held in Allee Gymnasium. This is&#13;
a booster organization and membership is not&#13;
limited to letter winners,. H a rold Bollman,&#13;
president of the " M " C lub presided .&#13;
&#13;
Miss Sherry Read, of Algona, was crowned&#13;
freshman queen d uring Morningside college&#13;
Homecoming festivities .&#13;
The co ronation ceremony wa s held Thursday, October 19, at the annua l pep rally and&#13;
bon fire on Bass Field.&#13;
Saturday morning&#13;
October 21 , she was :&#13;
honored in the Homecoming parade.&#13;
Freshman queen attendants were Rita&#13;
Noehren of Harlan, Susan Buckingham, Jean&#13;
Langlas, Belle Plaine, Iowa, and Marge Freeman, Cylinder, Iowa .&#13;
Sherry is majoring in business administration at the college.&#13;
&#13;
Sorority reunion luncheons were held at&#13;
noon a t the Biltmore R esta urant. K appa Pi&#13;
Alpha (formerly Alpha Delta Pi a nd Pieria),&#13;
D elta Zet a (formerly K appa Z eta Sigma (formerly and Atheneauim) sororities participated.&#13;
The play " private Life of the Master Race",&#13;
by Brecht, was presented by the drama department in the a fternoon.&#13;
The a nnua l H omecoming dinner was held&#13;
in the d ining room of Dimm itt Hall that&#13;
evening, a t which time the Alumni Association officers for 1961-62 were installed. Don&#13;
Stone presided until h e h ad installed the new&#13;
officers.&#13;
Morningside was defeated b y State College&#13;
of Iowa (formerly Iowa State Teachers) in&#13;
the Homecoming game 43 to 27.&#13;
Coffee a nd doughnuts wer e served to a lumni and friends after the game in the dra wing&#13;
room of Dimmitt H all .&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Winn ing first p rize fo r floats in the Homecom ing parade was the one entered by&#13;
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity (formerly Alpha&#13;
Tau Delta and before that, Othonian). The&#13;
Theme of International Highlights was w ell&#13;
carried out by the float.&#13;
&#13;
NEW&#13;
INTERNATIONAL&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
Shown at the entrance of the new international House upon the occasion of a ribbon&#13;
cutting ceremony symbolizing its opening are&#13;
several foreign students along with&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Uemura , head of the Philosophy department&#13;
and Professor Ray Nelson, coordinato r of th e&#13;
African Student Program .&#13;
&#13;
INTE RNATIONAL HOUSE OPENS&#13;
A&#13;
the&#13;
held&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
ribbon cutting ceremony, symbolizes&#13;
opening of the International House,&#13;
at two o'clock on Saturday afternoon&#13;
a part of the Homecoming program.&#13;
&#13;
The house is an integrated project and&#13;
is occupied by 36 single American and&#13;
foreign students on campus. Foreign students on campus are from Africa, Korea,&#13;
Hong Kong, India, Iran, Indonesia, Japan&#13;
Formosa,. Greece, Norway, Panama, and&#13;
V,e nezuela.&#13;
Ralph Beerman ('35 ) speaks at the annual&#13;
workshops dinner held in G race Church on&#13;
Friday night of Homecoming.&#13;
&#13;
President Palmer spoke briefly on "Vision and Reality". He pointed out that&#13;
just three short months ago the International House was merely a vision, now it&#13;
has become a reality.&#13;
Members of the Cosmopolitan Club provided music for the ceremony, and club&#13;
president Carlos Escala of Panama spoke&#13;
briefly.&#13;
President Palmer cut the ribbon and an&#13;
open house followed.&#13;
Iowa churches have&#13;
,e nthusiastically&#13;
joined in supporting the African student&#13;
program. Twenty-one churches and two&#13;
sub-districts have agreed to " adopt" in part&#13;
or wholly one or more of the African students now in the program .&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
The Annual Alumni Workshop was held&#13;
Friday, October 20 in the lounge of the&#13;
Men's Residence Halls. The session started&#13;
at 10:00 A. M. following the ground breaking ceremonies for the New Student Center.&#13;
Don Stone ('50) president of the Alumni&#13;
Association presided. Those present heard&#13;
President Palmer, Dean Holmes, Admissions Director Bob Miller, A. W. Buckingham, and Elwood Olsen, business manager.&#13;
As much information as possible concerning Morningside and admission standards,&#13;
scholastic standards, athletics, the African&#13;
st udent program&#13;
and finances was presented. Discu ssion and questions followed&#13;
the presentations.&#13;
The aim was to inform representative&#13;
alumni from all areas concerning our college, so they can pass kn owledge along to&#13;
others; to gain the viewpoint of our alumni&#13;
on topics discussed, to outline methods by&#13;
which alumni and alumni clubs can be of&#13;
assistance to the college.&#13;
A very representative group attended&#13;
this year. Roger Burgess '50, president of&#13;
the Washington, D. C. Club was present&#13;
from the East Coast and Orin Bell '18&#13;
president of the Los Angeles Club was here&#13;
from the West Coast. Gaylord Omer was&#13;
present from Manitowec, W,i sconsin.&#13;
In attendance from Iowa were Lyle Poyzer '38 and Mrs. Poyzer of Boone. (Lyle&#13;
is president of the Ames Club), Rev.&#13;
Charles Wallace '50 and Anne Maddison&#13;
Wallace '50 from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Ed&#13;
Van Veldhuizen '48 and Helen Winter Van&#13;
Veldhuizen ('49) from the Mason City Club,&#13;
Arv Bomgaars '53 (president of the Spencer&#13;
Club), Dean Harrington '50 of Sioux Gity,&#13;
and Mary Louise Held Feikema '44 of&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Shown during a break at the planning&#13;
session are left to right, in TOP PICTURE&#13;
Elwood Olsen '38, Dr. Roadman, Bob Miller&#13;
'55.&#13;
CENTER PICTURE - Orin Bell '18 of&#13;
Orange, California and Rev. Charles Wallace&#13;
'50 of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, BOTTOM PICTURE&#13;
Mrs. Poyzer of Boone, Lyle Poyzer '30, Bob&#13;
Miller '55&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
ARTICLE BY PROFESSOR&#13;
EIDSMOE IN ISEA MIDLAND&#13;
SCHOOLS AND JOHPER&#13;
Russell M. Eidsmoe, head of the department of education at Morningside is the&#13;
author of an article titled "The Academic&#13;
Performance of High School Athletes",&#13;
published in the November issue of Midland&#13;
Schools and in Johper (Journal of Health,&#13;
Physical Education and Recreation.)&#13;
Mr. Eidsmoe begins by saying, as quoted&#13;
from Midland Schools, "A great deal of&#13;
guessing has been going on for many years&#13;
in regard to the academic quality of athletes. It has been rather common talk&#13;
among many, including teachers, to downgrade the scholastic efforts and abilities of&#13;
those who represent various sports. It is&#13;
often an assumption that participation in&#13;
athletic endeavors is either an invitation to&#13;
a low quality of academic performance or&#13;
that it attracts individuals who do not succeed academically. The first thought is&#13;
somewhat natural since athletic participation is very time consuming with almost&#13;
endless practices and sometimes involves&#13;
considerable travel to and from contests.&#13;
.. "To gain infor mation which could be considerably more objective, a survey was&#13;
made in Iowa of the academic standing of&#13;
the twelve members of each of the boys'&#13;
basketball teams representing their high&#13;
schools in the Iowa 1960-61 Boys' Sub-State&#13;
and State Tournaments . . . . . .&#13;
. . . . Schools were asked to report the&#13;
grade average at the end of the first&#13;
semester of the 1960-61 academic year for&#13;
every player in each course he was enrolled&#13;
and also to give the grade average of the&#13;
entire class in the same course . . . . . .&#13;
. .. . Fourteen out of the total of sixteen&#13;
schools involved turned in complete reports, thereby recording the results of 168&#13;
players out of a possible 192.&#13;
A four point system was used for recording the grades turned in.; A-4.0, B-3.0,&#13;
C-2.0 and D-1.0.&#13;
The results of the survey clearly indicate&#13;
that those who are participating in basketball and capable of advancing far in such&#13;
athletic competition are distinctly above&#13;
&#13;
average in academic performance. The&#13;
grade point results for the 168 players in&#13;
all courses enrolled averaged 2.566.&#13;
The&#13;
grade point results for all the classes in&#13;
which these players were enrolled averaged&#13;
2.186 showing a very significant depar ture&#13;
in favor of the athletes."&#13;
Mr. Eidsmoe constructed a t able showing&#13;
the breakdown of grade point averages by&#13;
classes. He concludes his article with this&#13;
statement.&#13;
"The survey does show very plainly that&#13;
athletes such as basketball players who are&#13;
highly competitive in their chosen sport are&#13;
also above the average of their fellow students in academic performance, a point&#13;
which in many cultural circles has been&#13;
definitely denied or in doubt."&#13;
The article by Professor Eidsome gained&#13;
a very favorable editorial in the November&#13;
14th Des Moines Register.&#13;
&#13;
PARENTS ON CAMPUS, DEC. 2&#13;
Parents of students attending Morningside College were invited to the campus&#13;
Saturday, December 2, for a day of attending sample classes, conferring with faculty&#13;
members, and hearing administrative staff&#13;
members.&#13;
The Parents' Day program began at&#13;
9 a. m. with a welcome-registration session&#13;
with J . Clifford Holmes, dean of the college, giving a brief welcoming address.&#13;
Parents then were invited to attend abbreviated class sessions - actual classes that&#13;
are attended each week by their sons and&#13;
daughters. The course instructor conducted&#13;
the class in a manner similar to the usual&#13;
procedure. A sample chapel session in the&#13;
sanctuary of Grace Methodist church concluded the morning program.&#13;
Those parents who could remain stayed&#13;
for the evening meal at Dimmitt hall.&#13;
Stanley L. Greigg, dean of men, was&#13;
chairman of the committee planning the&#13;
Parents' day program. Serving on the committee with Dean Greigg are Dean White,&#13;
Miss Lois Grammar, A. W. Buckingham,&#13;
Robert Miller and James Miller.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETICS&#13;
1961 FOOTBALL&#13;
SEASON HIGHLIGHTS&#13;
The Maroon Chiefs finished the 1961&#13;
football season with 3 and 6 record. Coach&#13;
Halford, a mighty battler himself, fought&#13;
injuries to key players all season. This&#13;
was a good team, confronted with stiff&#13;
competition. The season's results are&#13;
printed below along with some very interesting statistics.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Opponents&#13;
14&#13;
Wayne State Teachers 19&#13;
6&#13;
Omaha U.&#13;
32&#13;
14&#13;
Panhandle of Okla.&#13;
7&#13;
15&#13;
North Dakota U.&#13;
49&#13;
7&#13;
North Dakota State&#13;
6&#13;
27&#13;
State College of Ia.&#13;
43&#13;
14&#13;
Augustan a&#13;
23&#13;
7&#13;
South Dakota State&#13;
55&#13;
Roger Hansen, from Central high school&#13;
in Sioux City and a junior was named an&#13;
all North Central Conference first team&#13;
end. He caught 31 passes for a total of&#13;
300 yards gained and one touchdown. He&#13;
tallied one extra point on a reception and&#13;
led the conference in pass receiving.&#13;
Chuck Corbin, a senior from Mapleton,&#13;
Iowa was chosen second team all conference&#13;
center. He has completed his college work&#13;
and was employed as physical education&#13;
instructor and assistant coach at Rock&#13;
Rapids, Iowa, starting December 4th.&#13;
Dick Schmidt, a senior from Holstein&#13;
Iowa, received Honorable Mention in the all&#13;
conference selections.&#13;
Dick played the&#13;
tackle position and was a co-captain of t he&#13;
1961 team along with Chuck Corbin.&#13;
John Tollakson, senior half-back from&#13;
Sioux Rapids, Iowa, was chosen most valuable player for the 1961 season by his&#13;
teammates. He was team high scorer with&#13;
a total of 45 points, six touchdowns and 9&#13;
of 11 points after kicks. He was 8th in&#13;
the conference in scoring totals. John also&#13;
did the punting for Morningside and had a&#13;
3.3.1 yard average on 4.2 punts, ending up&#13;
seventh in the conference.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
The team averaged 2.39.7 yards per game,&#13;
with 125.5 yards being on the ground and&#13;
1142 yards passing.&#13;
..&#13;
The Chiefs were&#13;
second for the season in passing in the&#13;
conference, averaging 117.2 yards per conference game. First place went to South&#13;
Dakota State with 138.2 yards per game.&#13;
Graham Gould, a junior from Harlan, was&#13;
the leading ground gainer on the team&#13;
with a total of 263 yards rushing in 77&#13;
carries with a 34 yard average. Leading&#13;
the team in total offense with 38 completions for 88 attempts for an average of&#13;
60.4 yards per game was John Dornan of&#13;
Harlan, Iowa, a senior. He was third in&#13;
the Conference in passing, including two&#13;
touchdown passes.&#13;
Reserve quarterback,&#13;
Leo R upke, a junior from Heelan High&#13;
School in Sioux City, threw six touchdown&#13;
passes during the season. He ended up&#13;
sixth in the conference in total passing.&#13;
No doubt the brightest highlight of the&#13;
season was the win over South Dakota University at their Homecoming at Vermillion.&#13;
This was the Chief's third straight win&#13;
over the Coyotes.&#13;
The freshman squ ad, under the tutelage&#13;
of Coach Don Protextor '49, won 2 of the&#13;
3 games they played.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
12&#13;
27&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Opponents&#13;
South Dakota&#13;
Augustana&#13;
Buena Vista B.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
34&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Rick Cowling, son&#13;
of R. M. Cowling '59,&#13;
was chosen as an end&#13;
on the Sandhill Gateway Conference football. His team (Orchard Nebraska high&#13;
school) had a 6-0 record in the conference. Mr. Cowling&#13;
teaches in the Orchard high school.&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL SEASON&#13;
The basketball season is underway. By&#13;
the time the Morningsider reaches you the&#13;
Varsity and freshman teams will have&#13;
played several games.&#13;
Varsity Coach Obye in a basketball guide&#13;
produced for p·r ess, radio and television&#13;
makes these observations.&#13;
"The season ahead . . . The Morningside&#13;
College Basketball team for 1961-62 must&#13;
be classified a s "sophomore". Of the&#13;
eleven members on the varsity squad, five&#13;
were with the Maroon Chief's Freshmen&#13;
Team one year ago. If one factor has a&#13;
definite bearing on the outcome of this&#13;
season it will be how fast these sophomores&#13;
gain poise and skill to meet a stiff schedule. The loss of the team's leading offensive ace Jim Anfinson and seven&#13;
others squad members could have considerable bearing on the Chief's offensive attack.&#13;
The Chief s face an ambitious schedule. The&#13;
North Central Intercollegiate Conference is&#13;
expected to be unusually tough this year.&#13;
And the Methodists will tackle Westmar&#13;
College, Cornell College, Nebraska Wesleyan University, Huron College, Yankton&#13;
Colleg e, Omaha University and Mankato&#13;
State of Minnesota in non-conference tests&#13;
in addition to par ticipating in the Six-State&#13;
Tournament at Hastings College of Nebraska.&#13;
How Do they Look? . . . . again the&#13;
sophomore factor. Paul TeStroete, Bob&#13;
Garretson, and Rog Hansen form a nucleus&#13;
of returning star ters, but they'll need scoring efforts from Steve Pohlman, Chuck&#13;
Dickens, Walt Lill, Mike Reise and Phil&#13;
Wiggens to put consistent punch in the&#13;
offensive attack. The Chiefs are certain of&#13;
good overall speed and stamina. Chief&#13;
mentor Charles "Chuck" Obye is counting&#13;
on the early non-conference games to "jell"&#13;
the 1,961 contingent before they open North&#13;
Central Conference play on Jan. 9th.&#13;
Who are the veterans? . . . . Obye will&#13;
depend on five veterans to carry the load&#13;
this year. They are Paul TeStroete (1 letter); Bob Garretson (2 letters ) ; Roger&#13;
Hansen (1 letter); Steve Pohlman (2 lett ers); and Ron Heitritter. The only other&#13;
upper-dassman on the squad is Terry&#13;
&#13;
Wright who comes from Clarinda Junior&#13;
College."&#13;
"Chuck" Obye '46, is beginning his fifth&#13;
season at Morningside. His 1959 Maroon&#13;
Chiefs won the Iowa NAIA Championship.&#13;
This seasons' schedule is shown below.&#13;
"Bud" Brockman, a 191 graduate of&#13;
50&#13;
Westmar is in his first season as freshman&#13;
basketball coach. He reports on the freshman team, "There are some very fine ·b asketball players on the freshman team.&#13;
Although lacking in general overall height,&#13;
there are some fine shooters and rebounders who handle themselves very well".&#13;
&#13;
HEIMAN VAN DYKE&#13;
HONORED IN&#13;
HALL OF FAME&#13;
Basketball's founder at Morningside, Mr.&#13;
Heiman Van Dyke ('06) has been honored&#13;
by a life membership in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.&#13;
In August, Coach Chuck Obye wrote to&#13;
the captains of all the basketball teams&#13;
at Morningside from the first team of 190102 to the team of last year. He asked for&#13;
a contribution from each, to apply on a&#13;
life membership for Mr. Van Dyke. Any&#13;
who have not responded may still do so to&#13;
Coach Obye. A five dollar contribution entitles the donor to one free admission card&#13;
to the Hall of Fame at Springfield, Mass.,&#13;
and a copy or the original 1892 rules book.&#13;
The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall&#13;
of Fame has a ccepted a History of Basketball at Morningside College. This history&#13;
contains the names of all former coaches,&#13;
team records, captains, scoring records and&#13;
traditions of the college.&#13;
T eam Records:&#13;
Morningside&#13;
....62&#13;
Wcstmar&#13;
..69&#13;
M orningside ..................... 76&#13;
Cornell&#13;
.84&#13;
Morningside ................ 75&#13;
N eb. Wes.&#13;
. .....85&#13;
Huron ......&#13;
.... 72&#13;
M orningside... . .............89&#13;
Morningside ....................72&#13;
Yankton ···········- ··- · .49&#13;
Morningside ..................... 73&#13;
Cen t. Okla. ......... ..81&#13;
Morningside&#13;
........ 71&#13;
Betha ny, Kans. ......67&#13;
Morningside .&#13;
....82&#13;
G ut. Adol.&#13;
........... 77&#13;
Morningside ..................70&#13;
Manktao . ..................72&#13;
M o1·nings idc....&#13;
....82&#13;
Wcstma r .... ··········-·--58&#13;
Morningside...&#13;
......64&#13;
So. Da k.&#13;
...... 59&#13;
M o rningside...&#13;
..... 67&#13;
Sta te Coll. Iowa ....72&#13;
Morningside&#13;
............55&#13;
Omaha U . ....... - .......53&#13;
M orningside .... ...............73&#13;
Augustana&#13;
.... 67&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
James Juvenal Hayes&#13;
Dies in Pennsylvania&#13;
James Juvenal Hayes, Professor of English Literature at ,M orningside for 18 years,&#13;
passed away in September.&#13;
He was living&#13;
in Glen Mills, Pennsylvania and word of&#13;
his death was received from a daughter,&#13;
Dorothy Riley.&#13;
Professor Hayes, fondly remembered by&#13;
his students as "Jimmy" Hayes came to&#13;
Morningside in the fall of 1914. He had&#13;
received his B. A. at Harvard in 1911 and&#13;
his Masters Degree from the same school&#13;
in 1912. He had done graduate work at&#13;
the University of Chicago in 1912-14, and&#13;
in the summers of 1915 - 18 - 20. He obtained his PhD at the State University of&#13;
Iowa after leaving Morningside in 1932.&#13;
Jimmy Hayes was a popular faculty&#13;
member during his tenure at Morningside.&#13;
He coached many plays and furni sh ed many&#13;
programs. He will be remembered by the&#13;
many alumni who knew him as a friend, a&#13;
scholar, and a gentleman.&#13;
Mrs. Hayes died several years ago. Many&#13;
Morningsiders will remember their three&#13;
children, Dorothy, Hester and James.&#13;
Following the fire on December 6, 1914,&#13;
which destroyed the conservatory, Professor Hayes submitted the following verse&#13;
which was printed on page 2,16 of the 1916&#13;
Sioux. (annual)&#13;
Morningside&#13;
The Crimson sun of morning&#13;
Came peeping o'er the hill&#13;
With radiance adorning&#13;
A t emple, white and still,&#13;
A fane we t hought immortal,&#13;
So solidly it stood.&#13;
Inscribed above its portal :&#13;
"Th e Beautiful, the Good"&#13;
But as the night descended,&#13;
The toilers standing by,&#13;
Saw all their labors ended&#13;
Infla mes, which leaping high ,&#13;
'Mid roars and lurid crash es,&#13;
Devoured i t where it s tood ,&#13;
And left in smoking ashes :&#13;
"The Beautiful, the good"&#13;
But as n ew s uns ascended&#13;
Behind the selfsame hill,&#13;
Behold. a vision splendid&#13;
A fa irer t emple stll&#13;
A temple ever growing,&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Expanding as it should,&#13;
To all the nations showing:&#13;
"The Beautiful, the Good"&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Participates&#13;
In Three Speech Tourneys&#13;
The Morningside speech department has&#13;
participated in three speech tournaments to&#13;
date, and in each instance have won honors&#13;
for the college.&#13;
In a tournament at Omaha University,&#13;
on November 3rd and 4th, Irene Duvall of&#13;
Sioux City was adjudged top debater in&#13;
Class "B". Jerry Va ughn was 2nd ranking&#13;
debater in Class "A", Terry Ford of Sioux&#13;
City Placed 3rd in Extempore Speaking;&#13;
the Discussion Team won 4th place. Both&#13;
the "A" division debate team and the "B"&#13;
division team won 3 and lost 5.&#13;
At South Dakota University, in a tournament held there November 17th and 18th,&#13;
Robert Gourley was given superior ratings&#13;
in discussion and debate, Jerry Vaughn won&#13;
superior ratings in interpretation and debate and Robert Gourley and Irene Duvall&#13;
were undefeated in debate. The "A" division debate team had 5 wins and 3 losses,&#13;
while the "B" division t eam had 10 wins&#13;
and 6 losses. On December 1st and 2nd,&#13;
Morning side travelled to Wayne State&#13;
Teachers for a meet and Barbara Larson&#13;
won a superior in Extempore Speaking and&#13;
Terry Ford a superior in Oratory. The "A"&#13;
division debate team had 6 win s, 4 losses.&#13;
The debate record to date in debating&#13;
against 27 teams from six states is 27 wins&#13;
and 23 losses.&#13;
The members of this year's debate squad&#13;
are: Karen Braunschweig, Irene Duvall,&#13;
Terry Ford, Robert Gourley, Robert Iverson, Barbara Larson, John Prast, Maroldine&#13;
Smith, Dean Summerbell, Clare Swanson,&#13;
William Vail, Jerr y Vaughn and Richard&#13;
Worthan.&#13;
John Braheny and Rachel Lindhar t h ave par ticipated in individuals events.&#13;
Dean Tudehope '5,5 was on the campus&#13;
this fall while v,a cationing in Sioux City.&#13;
Dean is factory representative with W. G.&#13;
Cline and Co., dealing in building and&#13;
plumbing supplies. The Tudehopes have a&#13;
daughter Donna Lynn, 15 months old.&#13;
&#13;
Professor and Family&#13;
Study, Tour Europe&#13;
Dr. William Palmer, professor of English and head of the English department,&#13;
and his wife and four children spent the&#13;
summer in the British Isles and France.&#13;
They sailed from Montreal, Canada, on&#13;
June 12 and returned thereon August 25&#13;
after visiting England, Wales, Scotland,&#13;
and France.&#13;
Dr. Palmer spent four weeks living in a&#13;
small village in Gloucestershire and two in&#13;
London. While in England, he studied in&#13;
the libraries of Oxford and Cambridge universities and at the British Museum in&#13;
London. The Palmers visited Rugby and&#13;
Eton, famous English boys' schools.&#13;
They viewed ancient buildings including&#13;
many cathedrals, abbey churches, and&#13;
castles. They saw the ruins of Roman&#13;
cities in Western England and at St. Albans&#13;
near London. While in Scotland, Dr. Palmer lived in Old Meldrum, a small village&#13;
near Aberdeen.&#13;
He spent his time ·e xamining medieval&#13;
manuscripts at the library of King's college&#13;
at Aberdeen. Dr. Palmer gained first-hand&#13;
knowledge of the workings of the British&#13;
educational system. The Palmers found the&#13;
shopping and the educational systems in&#13;
the British Isles quite interesting.&#13;
Paris was the location of their principal&#13;
stay while they were in France. They remained in France five days and then returned to the United States.&#13;
&#13;
3100 MUSICIANS ON&#13;
CAMPUS FOR BAND DAY&#13;
The annual Morningside College Band&#13;
Day was held on October 7th with 3100&#13;
musicians from 55 high school bands participating. The bands were from Iowa,&#13;
Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE FACULTY PIANO&#13;
TEAM PLAYS AT YANKTON&#13;
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ralph Harrell, of the music&#13;
department at Morningside college, were&#13;
featured at chapel exercises at Yankton&#13;
college Thursday, October 5. They played&#13;
the piano duet Variations on an Original&#13;
Theme, Opus 35, by Schubert.&#13;
&#13;
SHAW'S "ARMS AND THE MAN"&#13;
SPONSORED BY MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The Cleveland Play House presented&#13;
George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man&#13;
on October 27th in the East High school&#13;
auditorium.&#13;
"Arms and the Man", one of Shaw's most&#13;
popular plays has had countless productions throughout the world since its London&#13;
Premier over half a century ago.&#13;
The Cleveland Play House, now in its&#13;
46th season of operation, is one of the&#13;
oldest and most outstanding professional&#13;
theaters in the United States. This is the&#13;
second season on the road for the Play&#13;
House touring repertory company, which&#13;
last season performed in 38 states.&#13;
Morningside College sponsored the Sioux&#13;
City appearance of "Arms and the Man".&#13;
&#13;
PHI MU ALPHA SINFONIA&#13;
GIVES JAZZ CONCERT&#13;
Phi Mu Altha, a national professional&#13;
music fraternity of men, dedicated to the&#13;
advancement of music and to the brotherhood among men engaged in music activities, presented their second annnual Jazz&#13;
Concert at East junior high school auditorium on November 3.&#13;
The concert, pres·e nted to a full house&#13;
and enthusiastically received, was a benefit. The proceeds are to help provide a&#13;
sound system for the new student center.&#13;
&#13;
POET EDITOR SPEAKS&#13;
AT MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Miss Denise Levertov, poetry editor of&#13;
The Nation read some of her poems at&#13;
8:30 p. m. Friday, November 3, in Klinger&#13;
forum on the Morningside college campus.&#13;
Miss Levertov, whos·e mother is Welsh,&#13;
and whose father, an Anglican clergyman,&#13;
was by birth a Russian Jew, was born in&#13;
London. She has never attended school or&#13;
college, but was educated at home.&#13;
She has published four volumes of poetry&#13;
in the last s·e ven years. Her most recent&#13;
books are With Eyes in The Back of Our&#13;
Heads and The Jacob's Ladder. Following&#13;
the program, an informal reception for&#13;
Miss Levertov was held in the faculty&#13;
lounge in Lewis Hall.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
FOREIGN FILM SERIES&#13;
BY STUDENT COUNCIL&#13;
&#13;
KUCINSKI GUEST CONDUCTOR&#13;
AT FREDONIA, N.Y. CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
"The World of Film", composed of six&#13;
foreign films, started Saturday, October 28,&#13;
serving as a series of film entertainment&#13;
free of charge to all students of Morningside.&#13;
An English comedy, "The Captain's&#13;
Paradise" starring Alec Guiness and&#13;
Yvonne de Carlo, was the first film.&#13;
"Miracle in Milan", "Rashomow", "M",&#13;
and "Henry V" complete the program.&#13;
Each film will be shown in Klinger&#13;
forum, free to all students.&#13;
The "World of Films" comes to the college through the efforts of Dr. Howard&#13;
Levant (English), Dr. Joseph Uemura&#13;
(Philosophy) and Dave Otto, student council representative. Dr. Levant says the&#13;
films have been picked for dramatic and&#13;
technical interest, and that their purpose&#13;
was " to sophisticate the student body for&#13;
the teachers benefit."&#13;
&#13;
Leo Kucinski was g uest conductor for an&#13;
annual orchestra concert at Fredonia State&#13;
College in Fredonia, New York.&#13;
One of the featured performers in the&#13;
program was Homer Garretson '42 who is&#13;
on the faculty at Fredonia State College,&#13;
teaching strings. He received his masters&#13;
degree several years ago at Eastman School&#13;
of Music and was recently awarded his&#13;
PhD from the University of Illinois. Mrs.&#13;
Garretson (Gloria Odegaard '44) earned&#13;
her Master of Music degree at Eastman.&#13;
At least two Morningsiders were in the&#13;
audience, Jeff Fraser '54 and Alleen Linquist Fraser '53 of Rochester. They both&#13;
teach in Rochester, Jeff doing string work&#13;
and Alleen doing grade school music.&#13;
&#13;
FALL ENROLLMENT FIGURES&#13;
Fall enrollment at Morningside showed a&#13;
12 1/2&#13;
per cent gain over last year's figures.&#13;
The total equated enrollment is 1,142. The&#13;
comparable figur ue for 1960 was 1015.&#13;
The new freshman class has an enrollment of 425 students, with 270 sophomores,&#13;
217 juniors, 155 seniors, and 44 nurses who&#13;
take classes at the college. Thirty-eight&#13;
foreign students represent eleven countries.&#13;
Students on the campus come from 25 religious denominations - approximat ely 39%&#13;
are from Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
COUNSELING REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
Dr. Goodrich C. White, Chancellor of&#13;
Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia was&#13;
on the Morningside Campus in November,&#13;
under the auspices of the Board of Education of the Methodist Church and as counseling representative of the association of&#13;
American Colleges and Universities. He&#13;
conferred with the college officials at the&#13;
request of Dr. Palmer, President.&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Chemical Society Meets&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
The Iowa-Nebraska Sioux Valley section&#13;
of the American Chemical Society held its&#13;
annual meeting Saturday, November 18 at&#13;
4 p. m., in . ones Hall of Science on the&#13;
J&#13;
Morningside college campus.&#13;
Guest speaker for the event was Blaine&#13;
C. McKusick. He spoke on New Ring&#13;
Systems from Fluoroalkylacetylenes. Dr.&#13;
McKusick received his B.Ch.E. degree at&#13;
the University of Minnesota and his Ph.D.&#13;
in organic chemistry at the University of&#13;
Illinois. He has also studied at Harvard&#13;
and Zurich, Switzerland.&#13;
Dr. McKusick has been with the central&#13;
research department of the DuPont company since 1945 and is currently research&#13;
supervisor there.&#13;
H e has also been a member of the editorial board of the Organic Syntheses since&#13;
1957.&#13;
&#13;
His chief research interests include cyanocarbons,&#13;
fluorocarbons, organosulfur&#13;
chemistry, radiation chemistry, and syntheses at very high pressures.&#13;
A coffee hour was held from 3 to 4 p. m.&#13;
prior to Saturday's meeting in the faculty&#13;
lounge of Lewis hall on the Morningside&#13;
campus.&#13;
&#13;
20TH ANNUAL SUPERINTENDENT'S&#13;
CONFERENCE HELD&#13;
Approximately two hundred Superintendents of Schools attended the annual superintendents Conference Oct. 7th sponsored&#13;
by Morningside College.&#13;
The conference, under the direction of&#13;
Professor Russell M. Eidsmoe, head of the&#13;
department of education, featured as keynote speakers Dr. Walter W. Cook, Dean&#13;
of the college of educat ion at the University of Minnesota,&#13;
and Dr. Nicholas&#13;
Nyaradi, director of the school of international studies at Bradley University, and&#13;
former Minister of Finance of Hungary.&#13;
Dr. Cook addressed the conference at the&#13;
morning session in Lillian E. Dimmitt Hall.&#13;
His topic was "The Personality of a Teacher."&#13;
Dr. Nyaradi addressed the group at the&#13;
noon luncheon at the Sheraton-Martin&#13;
hotel. His topic was "Shall We Survive".&#13;
Following the morning address by Dr.&#13;
Book, the superintendents had the opportunity of sitting in on two discussion groups.&#13;
One dealt with "The Intermediate School&#13;
Unit" and the other with "The Place of&#13;
the Schools in Relating the Menace of&#13;
Communism.''&#13;
&#13;
PHI MU ALPHA SINFONIA&#13;
RECEIVES PROVINCE VI AWARD&#13;
The Morningside college chapter of Phi&#13;
Mu Alpha Sinfonia professional music fraternity, received the Best Chapter of Province VI award at the officer's workshop&#13;
held on Morningside's campus this week.&#13;
The presentation was made by Carlton A.&#13;
Chaffee, province governor, and was received by Kn Wolfswinkel, local chapter&#13;
president, and Dr. Donald N. Morrison,&#13;
faculty advisor.&#13;
The award is presented bi-annually to&#13;
the chapter in the province that has shown&#13;
the most prograss in activities and leadership.&#13;
Other chapters in the province are located at the University of Nebraska, University of South Dakota, University of&#13;
Omaha, Northern State Teacher's College,&#13;
and Nebraska State College.&#13;
&#13;
New Faculty&#13;
Two new members have been added to&#13;
the faculty since the last Morningsider&#13;
went to press.&#13;
Dr. Edna Landros, now professor of&#13;
foreign language, is teaching Spanish. She&#13;
received her bachelor of arts degree at the&#13;
University of Kansas and was awarded a&#13;
Ph. D degree from the University of Oregon.&#13;
She has also studied at the University of&#13;
Chicago, University of California, Harvard,&#13;
and the University of Mexico.&#13;
Before&#13;
coming to Morningside, Dr. Landros taught&#13;
at the universities of Oregon, Arizona and&#13;
New Mexico.&#13;
Mr. John Watt has taken over duties as&#13;
assistant professor of foreign language at&#13;
Morningside. He has just returned from&#13;
Leon, France, where he studied as a Fullbright scholar.&#13;
Mr. Watt is teaching&#13;
French.&#13;
&#13;
Religious Groups&#13;
Hold Retreats&#13;
Two of the religious groups of the Morningside college campus held retreats on&#13;
Saturday, September 30.&#13;
The Methodist Student Movement spent&#13;
Saturday and Saturday night at the Goodwill camp grounds. Dr . Buckwalter, district superintendent of the Fort Dodge district of the Methodist church, was guest&#13;
speaker at that meeting.&#13;
The Lutheran Student Association members went to the Salvation Army camp.&#13;
Consultants for their all-day session were&#13;
Rev. Van Tassel, pastor of the First&#13;
Lutheran church, Rev. Wold, pastor of&#13;
Morningside Lutheran church, and Rev.&#13;
Kleinhans, chaplain at the Sioux City Air&#13;
Base.&#13;
&#13;
CONDUCT EUROPEAN TOUR&#13;
Orin W. Bell '18 and Mrs. Bell of Orange,&#13;
California in conjunction with World Travel Tours, Inc. will conduct an European&#13;
tour next June. The tour group leaves&#13;
New York June 27th for a Jet flight to&#13;
London.&#13;
Anyone interested in our details can contact Mr. Bell at 1115 Van Bibber, Orange,&#13;
California.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
FOOTING THE BILL&#13;
By Elwood Olsen, A. B. Morningside '38, Juris D. State University of&#13;
Iowa '41, LLM, George Washington&#13;
University '46. Business Mgr. Morningside College 1948&#13;
Students are paying more than ever before for their college education, but still&#13;
they do not pay the entire cost. Each year&#13;
at Morningside the administration has the&#13;
task of coming up with approximately&#13;
$300,000.00 in order to meet the difference&#13;
between what the student pays and the&#13;
actual cost of operating the College. This&#13;
$300,000.00 comes from a number of differents cources. Morningside is fortunate. in&#13;
having the support of the church, individuals, corporations, and foundations, all contributing generously to provide what the&#13;
student does not pay.&#13;
&#13;
$300.00 GRANT TO EACH MORNINGSIDER: If this $300,000.00 from outside&#13;
sources were a huge grant, divided among&#13;
the students at Morningside, about $300.00&#13;
would annually go to each one enrolled.&#13;
A student at Morningside, paying full tuition, does not pay the full cost of his education. Every student, even if he pays his&#13;
entire bill, receives a $300.00 grant which&#13;
makes his year at Morningside possible.&#13;
Generous giving has provided these grants&#13;
and has helped sponsor these young people.&#13;
Your gift to Living Endowment helps. Your&#13;
bequest in a Will helps to build up the&#13;
College's Permanent Endowment, the income from which goes directly into our&#13;
operating budget and thus helps educate&#13;
these young people. Your contribution to&#13;
the Methodist church, or MDC, helps provide these "grants" that every Morningsider receives.&#13;
There's a Second Grant, to each student,&#13;
in addition to the $300.00 one already mentioned. This is the grant that provides the&#13;
physical facilities that the young people use&#13;
every day on the campus of Morningside&#13;
College. Gifts through the years have provided fine buildings, and under President&#13;
Palmer's Twelve-Year Plan many more are&#13;
coming. If these gifts for buildings were&#13;
equally allocated to every generation of&#13;
students, the grant each would receive&#13;
annually would double the $300.00 already&#13;
mentioned.&#13;
STUDENT AID: In addition to the&#13;
above grants, Morningside give, to those&#13;
who achieve high academic distinction in&#13;
high school and college, scholarship help.&#13;
During the past year $120,254.. 00 of aid in&#13;
.&#13;
the form of scholarships, grants and rebates&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
was allocated to 417 students. Most of this&#13;
aid was "unfunded," or in other words, it&#13;
had to be raised - the College does not&#13;
have sufficient endowment (investments) to&#13;
produce the income to provide fully these&#13;
grants. Our President has just announced&#13;
a new "Wills and Estates" program through&#13;
which a determined effort will be made to&#13;
increase the endowment to $400,000.00 by&#13;
1970, and thus "fund" much of this student aid.&#13;
"Scholarships": Scholarship help is&#13;
awarded in several areas. Competition for&#13;
the awards is keen. In recognizing academic&#13;
excellence Honor Scholarships are granted&#13;
to all high school students who rank in the&#13;
upper 10 per cent of their graduating class.&#13;
These scholarships are in the amount of&#13;
$400, distributed equally over four college&#13;
years.&#13;
Competitive and Educational Scholarships&#13;
are awarded to those who have attained a&#13;
high scholastic average and have also&#13;
scored well in either the American College&#13;
Test (ACT) or the College Extrance Examination Board (CEEB) program. The&#13;
actual amount of the award varies from a&#13;
small stipend to full tuition and is dependent upon the actual financial need of the&#13;
individual application. The college works&#13;
within a specific budget when awarding&#13;
scholarships and the size of the individual&#13;
scholarships determines the number to be&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Morningside College has a number of&#13;
Grants-in Aid in such fields as music,&#13;
speech, and athletics. There are also Miniterial Rebates and Christian Service Grants&#13;
which provide one-half tuition. Veterans'&#13;
Benefits are still available to those whose&#13;
qualify, and College personnel help the student in making the necessary applications&#13;
for this aid.&#13;
Another Area of financial aid at Morningside is the opportunity for Part-time&#13;
Work. A few hours employment each week&#13;
while attending College, not only gives the&#13;
student funds necessary to help pay board&#13;
and room, but also gives valuable experience in the field of busienss and public&#13;
relations. The Sioux City community has&#13;
work for many students in a variety of professions and industries. Morningside's Student Personnel office actively helps the&#13;
students get located in jobs both on and off&#13;
campus.&#13;
&#13;
FINANCING AN EDUCATION AT&#13;
MORNINGSIDE: The College has several&#13;
plans that make it "easier'' to finance one's&#13;
education. There is a plan that fits the&#13;
need of every student and/ or his family.&#13;
No one should be prevented from attending&#13;
Morningside for financial reasons. If he&#13;
&#13;
wants to spread payments over several&#13;
months, Morningside has a "Deferred Payment Plan." If more time is needed and&#13;
the student wants to pay after graduation,&#13;
the money can be borrowed. (at least a&#13;
part of it can.)&#13;
Deferred Payments: Under Morningside's&#13;
deferred payment plan the total cost of&#13;
tuition, fees, board and room, etc. is divided&#13;
into monthly installments which are paid&#13;
throughout the current semester. Payments,&#13;
then, must be made according to the schedule agreed upon with the student. A small&#13;
deferred payment fee is charges when this&#13;
plan is used.&#13;
Student Loans: In the future most student assistance programs will be dominated&#13;
by loans. In spite of some "unpopularity"&#13;
a few years ago, borrowing for an education today has become more acceptable.&#13;
Money available for loans has increased&#13;
enormously; but even so, Morningside could&#13;
use additional funds in order to honor fully&#13;
all worthy applications. Many alumni have&#13;
sent gifts to establish loan funds which are&#13;
administered by the Morningside Staff.&#13;
While loans are likely to be the principal&#13;
means of assisting students to pay required&#13;
tuition and fees, it is not suggested that&#13;
a student should borrow the full cost of&#13;
his education; but a loan combined with the&#13;
other student aids, plus family savings and&#13;
summer employment, should make it possible for every young person, who really&#13;
wants an education, to attend college.&#13;
It appears that much of the expanding&#13;
need for financial assistance will be furnished by loans because competition for&#13;
scholarships is high and they go to a select&#13;
few. Many donors set up scholarship funds,&#13;
others like the idea of designating their&#13;
gifts to loan funds which will then be&#13;
perpetuated for use by many generations&#13;
of young people. For some students to&#13;
meet their financial needs it will take a&#13;
scholarship, a loan, and employment, plus&#13;
whatever help the family can give. Every&#13;
student accepted unconditionally for admission to Morningside is elegible to apply for&#13;
a loan.&#13;
This growth in student loans is not peculiar to Morningside; it is nationwide. In&#13;
1956, loans to students throughout the&#13;
United States amounted to only $13 million.&#13;
But in the last two years, the Federal Government alone has furnished over 4100 million for student loans and the amount&#13;
available through this source is increasing&#13;
annually. While only 750 colleges had loan&#13;
programs a few years ago, today more&#13;
than 1500 colleges have made loan funds&#13;
available to students.&#13;
Morningside students can borrow from a&#13;
number of different sources. These loans&#13;
&#13;
give them an opportunity to spread the&#13;
cost of their education over several years.&#13;
The National Defense Education Act provides funds for loans which are made on&#13;
the basis of need. Special consideration is&#13;
given to the students with superior academic background who desire to teach in&#13;
the elementary and secondary schools, and&#13;
who intend to specialize in science, mathematics, engineering, or foreign languages.&#13;
Repayment of these federal loans begins&#13;
one year after the student ceases to attend&#13;
college and the student has ten years in&#13;
which to repay. No interest is charged&#13;
until one year after the student is out of&#13;
college, and then it is paid at the rate of&#13;
3%. If the student becomes a full-time&#13;
teacher in a public school, the loan is cancelled at the rate of 10% a year for five&#13;
years, or a total of 50% of the principal&#13;
of the loan.&#13;
Morningside has been fortunate in receiving liberal grants from the Federal&#13;
government for the making of these student loans. Last year more than three&#13;
hundred students borrowed from the National Student Defense Loan Fund. Loans&#13;
range from $100.00 to $1,000.00 (which is&#13;
the maximum which can be borrowed in any&#13;
one academic year.) The average loan at&#13;
Morningside has&#13;
been&#13;
approximately&#13;
$550.00. This loan program has aided many&#13;
in attending college who would have found&#13;
it impossible to continue their education if&#13;
they could not have borrowed.&#13;
These are other loan funds available to&#13;
Morningsiders through sources such as the&#13;
Methodist Board of Education, The Merritt&#13;
Credit Bureau Foundation, the Pickett and&#13;
Hatcher Education Fund, Eastern Star,&#13;
Consistory, P. E. 0., and many of the local&#13;
banks.&#13;
TUITION INCOME IMPORTANT: Helping the student finance the cost of his education is tremendously important to the&#13;
Morningside financial structure. No one&#13;
wants to price students out of college and&#13;
yet they must pay a part of the cost of&#13;
their education. They cannot be given&#13;
everything. Accordingly at Morningside&#13;
every possible way of financing his or her&#13;
own education is opened to the student.&#13;
71.4% of Morningside's operating budget&#13;
comes from tuition and fees. This compares&#13;
with a 59.2% average in Methodist Colleges.&#13;
With such a large percentage of our&#13;
operating income coming from tuition, it&#13;
becomes vital that student accounts be kept&#13;
liquid. Thus, the Morningside staff is continually working with its students, helping&#13;
them in every possible way to meet their&#13;
financial obligations and continue their&#13;
college education.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
GIFT FROM INSURANCE FIRM&#13;
RECOGNIZES MORNINGSIDE'S&#13;
CONTRIBUTION TO INDUSTRY&#13;
Reproduced below is a letter from the&#13;
Farmers Insurance Group to Dr. J. Richard&#13;
Palmer. The letter contained a $500.00&#13;
check. The Farmers Insurance Groups includes Farmers Insurance Exchange, Truck&#13;
Insurance Exchange, Fire Insurance Exchange, Mid-Century Insurance Company,&#13;
and Farmers New world Life Insurance&#13;
Company. their executive offices are in&#13;
Los Angeles.&#13;
Dr. J. Richard Palmer, President&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Sioux City 6, Iowa&#13;
Dear President Palmer:&#13;
Today, young people with outstanding ability&#13;
but limited means are offered educational opportunities through scholarship and similar financial aid programs. This is a significant American tradition.&#13;
We of the Farme rs In sura n ce Group. fully&#13;
recognize the r esponsibili ty of private industry&#13;
to perpetuate this t rad ition . Our contributions&#13;
to many independent univers ities are in appreciation for the outstanding work these schools a re&#13;
doing in training young people.&#13;
Among our personnel are graduates of independent universities located in every part of the&#13;
country.&#13;
These employees a re giving valuable&#13;
servicee to our organization, to our policyholders&#13;
and to the community. We recognize the importance of these independent unive rsity trained&#13;
people and feel that our gifts to preserve these&#13;
raditions should bear some relation to the benefits&#13;
our Compan ies receive from these private schools.&#13;
Consequently, our Board of Directors adopted&#13;
a tuition scholarship program for aid in several&#13;
broad fields. A detailed statement of participation requirements is attached.&#13;
The graduates of Morningside College employed&#13;
will the Farmers Insurance Group a nd who determine the size of our contribution&#13;
for the year&#13;
1961 are:&#13;
P. J. Scaletta, Jr.&#13;
Donald Vredenburgh&#13;
It is a pleas ure to enclose our check for $500.&#13;
it as&#13;
We hope you will accept and administer&#13;
outlined in the Farmers Insurance Group Tuition&#13;
Scholarship Program.&#13;
Sincerely yours ,&#13;
J. M. Smith&#13;
Executive Director&#13;
&#13;
P. J. Scaleta, Jr. is a member of the&#13;
Class of '48 and lives at 124 W. Washington in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Donald Vredenburgh is a member of the class of '50&#13;
and lives at 12479 S. E. Solmon Ct., Portland 16, Oregon.&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC DEPARTMENT&#13;
PRESENTS COMBINED CONCERT&#13;
The Morningside college music department presented the concert band, the chamber orchestra, and the oratoria choir in a&#13;
combined concert at 8:15 p. m., Monday,&#13;
November 20, at the East Junior high&#13;
school auditorium.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
In the first part of the program, the&#13;
concert band, under the direction of James&#13;
Hustis played Pavana by William Byrd,&#13;
Overture to Nabucco by Giuseppe Verde,&#13;
Slavanic Dances by Antonin Dvorak, and&#13;
Dubsnushka by Rimsky-Korsakov.&#13;
The second half of the program featured&#13;
the oratorio choir, under the direction of&#13;
James H. Wood, and the chamber orchestra,&#13;
under the direction of Leo Kucinski. They&#13;
presented the third act of Richard Wagner's&#13;
Die Meistersinger in concert version.&#13;
Soloists for Die Meistersinger were&#13;
James Wood, baritone; Wade Raridon,&#13;
tenor; Mrs. Rosemary Raridon, soprano;&#13;
James McDonald, tenor; and Carol Guthmiller, contralto.&#13;
&#13;
DR. BAUER HONORED&#13;
Dr. E. Theodore Bauer, Senior Professor&#13;
of Sociology at Morningside College and&#13;
head of the Sociology Department, was accepted for membership in the American&#13;
Association of Marriage Counselors, Inc. as&#13;
of June 1, 1961. The Association is the&#13;
only nationally recognized professional&#13;
organization of marriage counselors.&#13;
Dr. Bauer is recognized as an authority&#13;
on marriage counselling and has had much&#13;
experience professionally.&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY-STUDENT&#13;
RECEPTION HELD&#13;
The traditional Thanksgiving facultystudent reception at Morningside College&#13;
was held Tuesday (November 21) from&#13;
8 p. m. to midnight in Dimmitt hall.&#13;
The presidents of the four classes greeted&#13;
guests. Faculty members and their wives&#13;
were on hand to meet students.&#13;
The purpose of the reception is to acquaint the students with the faculty. Following the reception, a dance was held in&#13;
the dining hall of Dimmitt Hall.&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE&#13;
'16 Grad Lauded&#13;
In Dallas&#13;
Howard A. Allen '16, was feted by more&#13;
than 1500 former students and associates&#13;
at an open house in Dallas, Texas on Sunday, October 8th. Mr. Allan had served as&#13;
coach and principal in Adamson High&#13;
School in Dallas for 41 years. He went to&#13;
Dallas from Iowa in 1921; coached until&#13;
the 1928-1929 football season and became&#13;
principal in 1935.&#13;
A feature article in the Dallas Morning&#13;
News of October 1, paid high tribute to&#13;
Mr. Allen. Asked about the caliber of his&#13;
students across the span of years, "if they&#13;
are softer and less capable than their predecessors?" he replied as quoted from the&#13;
Morning News," Well, the best ones today&#13;
are as good or even better than those who&#13;
have gone before. And they're better informed. You can bet many will make great&#13;
names for themselves, in college and later.&#13;
Teaching too is far better than before . . .&#13;
it goes so far beyond what we used to&#13;
teach, and I don't think there are too many&#13;
'frills' today".&#13;
"After all, you don't run all the students down the same track you used to.&#13;
Job classifications are in the thousands,&#13;
while when I was in high school you could&#13;
name 20 and get them all. You've got to&#13;
prepare youngsters for this complex, specialized world."&#13;
Mr. Allen continutes to serve as manager&#13;
of Adamson High's unique scholarship&#13;
foundation. Again quoting Mr. Allen from&#13;
the article, "As far as I know no other&#13;
high school in America has anything like&#13;
this. Through the years it has developed&#13;
to the point that it contains $250.00 and&#13;
yields nearly $10.00 annually in dividends&#13;
and interest."&#13;
"The yield has permitted us to send&#13;
many deserving Adamson graduates to&#13;
college."&#13;
Mrs. Allen, formerly Peggy Johnson of&#13;
Cleghorn, Iowa and Mr. Allen were presented a console model color television set&#13;
&#13;
at the open house.&#13;
The 1916 Sioux in which Allen appears&#13;
as a Junior, says of him - "Hod is primarily and above all a student and accordingly has the respect of the faculty as well&#13;
as students. After mastering his assignments he finds time to play baseball, rush&#13;
ads, fill the office of Class President, and&#13;
participate in social life. He is modest,&#13;
unassuming and congenial. A man among&#13;
men. To know him is to admire him."&#13;
&#13;
RE-ELECTED TO DES MOINES&#13;
BOARD OF EDUCATION&#13;
Mary Cruikshank Grefe '43 (Mrs. Roland&#13;
Grefe) has been re-elected to a six year&#13;
term on the Des Moines Board of Education. She was elected to her first six year&#13;
term in 1955 and was president during the&#13;
1960-61 school year.&#13;
Mrs. Grefe taught at Spirit Lake and&#13;
Forest City prior to teaching at Roosevelt&#13;
High School in Des Moines from 1946&#13;
through 1948.&#13;
Roland Grefe '41 is a Des Moines attor-&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
ney. The Grefes have a son Roger, eleven&#13;
years old. They live at 5725 N. Waterbury&#13;
Rd., Des Moines 12, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Verl Crow '34 Cover&#13;
&#13;
Subiect of Magazine&#13;
Verl Crow '34 has been elected president&#13;
of the Iowa State Education Association,&#13;
and was featured as the cover personality&#13;
of the October issue of "Midland Schools".&#13;
Midland Schools is the official publication&#13;
of the ISEA.&#13;
Miss Crow was the keynote speaker at&#13;
the ISEA convention in Des Moines on&#13;
October 19th. In 1948-49 she was president&#13;
of the Sioux City Local, in 1949-50 she was&#13;
president of the Northwest District and in&#13;
1950-53 was a member of the ISEA Executive Board. She was a state NEA director&#13;
from 1954-60 and was Vice-President of&#13;
ISEA in 1960-61.&#13;
She received her MSE degree at Drake&#13;
this past summer.&#13;
Her teaching experience includes a rural&#13;
school in Woodbury County (and the added&#13;
duty of fireman for a heating stove). From&#13;
t he rural school she moved to teaching at&#13;
Holly Springs and from there to Alton,&#13;
then to the Sioux City school system. She&#13;
is currently dean of students at North&#13;
Junior High School.&#13;
Verl has been a loyal alumna and is at&#13;
present serving on the Alumni Award Committee of the Alumni Association.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS KINGSBURY HONORED&#13;
Francis A. Kingsbury '43 has been named&#13;
an associate of the Photographic Society of&#13;
America at the society's annual convention in New York.&#13;
He was cited for "his assistance to yout h&#13;
in photography, for his service to the&#13;
society in organizational activity and for&#13;
his accomplishments as an exhibitor and&#13;
judge."&#13;
A banker in Ponca, Nebraska, Francis&#13;
is founder of the North Central Camera&#13;
Club council, past president of the Sioux&#13;
City Camera Club and a frequent lecturer&#13;
for the club. HE is area representative for&#13;
the society.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Kingsbury is the former Vernice&#13;
Christiansen ('45).&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE RESSEGIEU RESIGNS&#13;
AFTER LONG SERVICE&#13;
Charlotte Ressegieu '36, resigned recently&#13;
from her post as executive director of the&#13;
Woodbury County Society of Crippled&#13;
Children and Adults, Inc. She had held&#13;
the position for nearly 12 years. She was&#13;
also executive director of the Siouxland&#13;
Rehabilitation, which is operated by the&#13;
society.&#13;
In an item in the December 6th issue of&#13;
the Sioux City Journal, David J . Albert,&#13;
president of the society was quoted, "I&#13;
deeply regret to have received the resignation of Charlotte Ressegieu. She has been&#13;
an untiring servant of the center and of&#13;
the entire Siouxland area. Her sincere and&#13;
very devoted service to our center has made&#13;
it one of the outstanding rehabilitation centers in the entire country."&#13;
Mrs. Ray Murphy, vice president of the&#13;
society said in the same article in the&#13;
Journal, "Her name in synonymous with&#13;
the Center. She will leave a mark in Sioux&#13;
City as a monument to her."&#13;
The center is supported through charity,&#13;
and has grown since Miss Ressegieu's&#13;
appointment in 1950 from a small office in&#13;
downtown Sioux City to a new center&#13;
across the street from the Methodist hospital. The hospital and the center are connected by a tunnel passageway under the&#13;
street.&#13;
The Journal quotes Miss Ressegieu upon&#13;
her resignation: "In the spring of 1950&#13;
with courage, hope and a look to the future&#13;
for the welfare of our crippled children and&#13;
adults we opened the Center in Bancroft&#13;
school building with a prayer and little&#13;
money."&#13;
"Since that time with many hours of&#13;
planning and toil we achieved our goals&#13;
and present facilities."&#13;
"I wish to express my heartfelt thanks&#13;
to the many board . members who have&#13;
given so generously of themselves and have&#13;
been so kind and thoughtful to those we&#13;
serve."&#13;
&#13;
Language Laboratory&#13;
To be Installed&#13;
A new $10,000 language laboratory will&#13;
soon be installed at Morningside college.&#13;
The laborat ory has been purchased to&#13;
enable students studying foreign languages&#13;
to better develop their listening and speaking abilities.&#13;
The new unit will consist of 20 stations&#13;
and a master console. Each of the stations&#13;
will be equipped with speaking, listening&#13;
and recording equipment. The master console plays a selection, and then the individual student listens and records his&#13;
answer.&#13;
The master console can play four languages at the same time and the individual&#13;
stations will be arranged so that students&#13;
of French, German, Russian, and Spanish&#13;
can all study at the same t ime without&#13;
bothering each other.&#13;
&#13;
LEON HICKMAN ON&#13;
PANEL AT COLUMBIA&#13;
Leon E. Hickm an '22, Executive VicePresident, Aluminum Corporation of America, was one of three panel participant s&#13;
at the Deans Day program for the Alumni&#13;
Association of the School of Business of&#13;
Columbia University in New York City on&#13;
December 2nd.&#13;
The topic was "Corporate Behavior in&#13;
the Market Place". Dean Courtney C.&#13;
Brown presided. In addition to Mr. Hickman, the other two panelists were Mr.&#13;
Philip Sporn, President, American E1ectric&#13;
Power Company and the Honorable Luther&#13;
H. Hodges, Secretary of Commerce, United&#13;
States of America.&#13;
Mr. Myron Hulse . .37 (president of the&#13;
New York Morningside Alumni Club) and&#13;
Mrs. Hulse of New York City and Mrs.&#13;
Clark Scott '24 and Mrs. Scott of Bridgeport, Connecticut were in attendance.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ALUMNUS&#13;
PART OF MUSIC PROGRAM&#13;
IN OMAHA SCHOOLS&#13;
Darwyn Snyder '48, head of the Instrumental Music in the Westside Community&#13;
&#13;
Schools of Omaha, is an integral part of&#13;
an outstanding program developed in 1947.&#13;
In 1947 the Westside schools had 344 children and 17 staff members and has now&#13;
grown to 7043 children and 305 staff members. School facilities have continued to&#13;
expand to meet the needs of the rapidly&#13;
growing system. Westside High School is&#13;
now accomodating 1975 students.&#13;
In the beginning music aptitude tests are&#13;
administered to all fourth grade students.&#13;
The music specialist studies and compares&#13;
each child's test with his academic achievement scores and makes preparations for an&#13;
interview. All interested students are personlly interviewed and given an apportunity to try the instrument of their choice.&#13;
After studying the test results and working directly with the student, an instrument&#13;
is recommended which meets the physical&#13;
and psychological demands of the child.&#13;
meet with an instrumental&#13;
Students&#13;
specialist for a period of 30 minutes twice&#13;
each week. Vocal music is taught in the&#13;
classroom while the instrumental students&#13;
attend band and orchestra classes. This&#13;
eliminates any possibility of instrumentalists mising academic work and affords&#13;
these students an opportunity to sing with&#13;
t heir classmates the other three days of&#13;
the week.&#13;
In Junior and Senior high school several&#13;
groups are available to the instrumentalist. There is a brass quartett, a saxaphone&#13;
sextet, a dance band, a trombone octet, a&#13;
clarinet choir, a string quartet, a flute&#13;
septet, a junior high symphonette, two&#13;
junior high orchestras, four junior high&#13;
bands, the Westside symphony orchestra,&#13;
and the Westside high school band.&#13;
In addition to these opportunities several&#13;
of the pupils participate in the Omaha&#13;
Youth Orchestra.&#13;
The 1958 Westside High School Band&#13;
attended the 25th Anniversary New Years&#13;
Festivities at the Orange Bowl.&#13;
Mrs. Snyder is the former Joan Meyer&#13;
('49). She is appearing as Portia in t he&#13;
production of Julius Caesar at the Omaha&#13;
Playhouse.&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK&#13;
NEW YORK - New York Club president&#13;
Myron Hulse ('37) and Mrs. Hulse hosted&#13;
the New York Club at their home in New&#13;
York City on November 17th. President of&#13;
Morningside, J. Richard Palmer, Don Poppen '57 of the Admissions department, and&#13;
Louis Croston were guests at the meeting.&#13;
The New York City area club elected the&#13;
following officers for the new year. Myron&#13;
Hulse was re-elected president, Dr. James&#13;
A. Goss, Jr. '37 was elected vice-president,&#13;
and Ruth Olsen Granstrom '41 was elected&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer. Not the least of the&#13;
newly elected officers was the official&#13;
mascot - Mr. Go-Go, the very personable&#13;
poodle of the Hulse's.&#13;
Dr. Max Stern '41 and Mrs. Stern of&#13;
Rochester travelled the greatest distance&#13;
to the meeting.&#13;
Others present were; Rev. Francis Brockman, '43, Rev. Wm. K. Burns '47, Dr. James&#13;
A. Coss, Jr. '37, and Mrs. Coss, Mrs.&#13;
Charles Gandek '38, Rev. Ivan Gosso '44,&#13;
Marvin Granstrom '42, Ruth Olsen Granstrom '41, Jacqueline Ecker Kirchner '5,7&#13;
and Mr. Kirchner, Julia La Grone '28,&#13;
Frank Leamer '26, Mildred Torbett Leamer&#13;
'2 5, Hobart Mossman '31 and Mrs. Mossman, Joe Ott '27, Ralph Pierce .. 12, Mrs.&#13;
Ralph Pierce, Ron Rawson .. 39, Ruth Miller Rawson FF, Clark Scott '24 and Mrs.&#13;
Soott, Esther Montgomery Smyres '18 and&#13;
Rev. Smyres, Asbury Stromberg '25, Lelia&#13;
Binger Stromberg '28, Rev. Don Walton '17,&#13;
Bessie Ried Walton '21, Robert Worsley&#13;
.. 37 and Mrs. Worsley.&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Top picture left to right, Don Walton ' 17,&#13;
Bessie Ried Walton '21, Joe Ott '27, Frank&#13;
Leamer '26, Mildred Torbett Leamer '25 .&#13;
Center picture left to right, Mrs. Hobart&#13;
Mossman, Mrs. Ruth Hayward&#13;
Gandek '38,&#13;
Hobart Mossman '31 . Hobart Mossman is the&#13;
older son of Dr. Frank Mossman '03 , a former&#13;
president of Morningside College.&#13;
Bottom picture left to right, Myron Hulse&#13;
('37) president of the New York Club, Reverend Roy Smyres, and Clark Scott '24.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Dale Rogers, Don Poppen, Roger Burgess,&#13;
President Palmer.&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON D. C. - The Washington D. C. Club met at the Little Tea House&#13;
for a dinner meeting on December 18th.&#13;
Roger Burgess, president of the club, presided. President J . Richard Palmer, told&#13;
about what is happening at Morningside.&#13;
Officers elected for the next year were&#13;
Packard Wolle '40, President, Eugene Emme&#13;
'41, Vice president and Carol Larsen Shafer '30, Secretary-treasurer. Several alumni&#13;
from the Baltimore Club were present.&#13;
They were Dorothy Surber Chiles '32, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Thomas Cox, Rev. John W. Payne&#13;
'43 (president of the Baltimore club) and&#13;
Mrs. Payne, and Ernest Madison '38 and&#13;
&#13;
GRAMMER GIRL REUNION&#13;
A group of Morningside Alumnae and&#13;
their families, who call themselves the&#13;
Grammer girls, had a reunion on June 18th&#13;
at Blue Lake Shelter House, Onawa, Iowa.&#13;
The name "Grammer girls" stems from&#13;
the fact that those involved were all girls&#13;
who during the war years lived in a house&#13;
off campus with Miss Lois Grammar,&#13;
Associate Professor of Music Education, as&#13;
their head resident.&#13;
A potluck dinner was served and the day&#13;
was spent swimming and reminiscing. In&#13;
the evening, a beatnick version of the&#13;
"Little Nell" skit made famous by Audrey&#13;
Hughes and Beverly Rehnblom back in the&#13;
"good old days", was presented by their&#13;
children Lynn and Jayne Miller, and Kim&#13;
and Debby Goodrich. The title of the new&#13;
version - "We Ain't got the Lettuce for&#13;
&#13;
Helen Tiedeman McDonald is carry ing out&#13;
her duties as secretary of the Washington&#13;
Club.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Madison. From the Washington D. C.&#13;
area were Robert Bates '53 and Mrs. Bates,&#13;
Wm. Bruce Lindsay '41 and Ila Eberle&#13;
Lindsay ('41), Earl E. Houseman '37 and&#13;
Mrs. Houseman, Dale Rogers '39 and Mrs.&#13;
Rogers, Roger Burgess '50 and Mrs. Burgess, Roscoe Carter '12, B. R. Hensley '50,&#13;
Mrs. Boyd Shafer (Carol Larsen '30),&#13;
Frederick Figert '30 and Mrs. Figert, Eugene Emme '41 and Ruth Rance Emme '41,&#13;
Maurice Scheider '41 and Mrs. Scheider,&#13;
Helen McDonald '21, H. G. Morrison Betty&#13;
Saunderson Brown . .42, Mrs J . M. Saunderson, Packard Wolle and Helen Osbey Wolle,&#13;
Marguerite Dewell Harrison .. 21, and E.&#13;
H. Erickson and Mrs. Erickson.&#13;
this Real Cool Pad."&#13;
The Millers and their four children were&#13;
enroute to New Jersey from Alaska. The&#13;
Goodriches and their four children flew&#13;
their own plane from Kentucky to be present.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
DES MOINES&#13;
The Des Moines Club under the leadership of Merle Wood, Supervisor of Business&#13;
Education in the Des Moines Schools, and&#13;
president of the Des Moines Alumni Club,&#13;
sponsored a coffee hour in the Kirkwood&#13;
Hotel during the ISEA Meeting in October.&#13;
Morningsiders from Des Moines and many&#13;
points in Iowa were present and had a&#13;
pleasant time.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
MRS. ROY JUSTUS&#13;
&#13;
2432 CLINTON AVENUE&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Langley Justus '25 sent the card,&#13;
as reproduced above, in answer to a letter&#13;
written to her after reading a feature&#13;
article in the Minneapolis Sunday Tribune.&#13;
The feature article was titled "They Seek&#13;
to Revive Lost Art of Handwriting" , and&#13;
states "One indication that interest in good&#13;
handwriting may be picking up is an exhibit sponsored by the Society of Italic&#13;
Handwriting Currently touring this country. These displays of an almost lost art&#13;
w:ill be shown through November at the&#13;
Minneapolis School of Art beginning October 30.&#13;
"Based in London, the Society for Italic&#13;
Handwriting is the vanguard of a slow&#13;
renaissance in beautiful, slanted writing&#13;
such as developed by 15th century scribes&#13;
studiously copying papal briefs."&#13;
"Though beautiful as any fine art, italic&#13;
handwriting serves a purpose of high practicality, according to the movement's leading expert in the Twin Cities area.''&#13;
The expert referred to is Mrs. Justus.&#13;
She says you never see a scribbler among&#13;
italic writers, no matter how fast they&#13;
write. She teaches italic handwriting to all&#13;
freshmen at the Minneapolis School of Art,&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS 4,&#13;
&#13;
MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
as a part of her course in calligraphy,&#13;
which is required of all students at the&#13;
school.&#13;
The article further states, "a pert, vivacious woman with youthful enthusiasm for&#13;
her art form, Mrs. Justus hopes civilization's handwriting can be saved through&#13;
the italic style.&#13;
"She points out that our schools teach&#13;
youngsters first to print discreet script&#13;
letters and later to write cursively, joining&#13;
other entirely different letters. This is awkward and confusing and students constantly&#13;
fight the trend toward illegibility despite&#13;
the lure of Palmer method citation."&#13;
"BY TEACHING THE ITALIC STYLE&#13;
INITIALLY, WE COULD PRODUCE NOT&#13;
ONLY LEGIBLE WRITING BUT BEAUTIFUL WRITING, MRS. JUSTUS CONTENDS."&#13;
Special pens carefully edged, are used for&#13;
italic writing. There a re none as yet manufactured in the United States. They are&#13;
available in England.&#13;
The italic script as reproduced on the&#13;
card is that of Mrs. Justus and demonstrates her ability.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
PHILADELPHIA&#13;
A delightful meeting of Philadelphia&#13;
Area Alumni was held Sunday evening,&#13;
November 19, in the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Roger Davis in Philadelphia. The group&#13;
enjoyed a buffet supper and a pleasant&#13;
evening around the Davis fire place. Present were Ralph Pitman '20, Mrs. Pitman,&#13;
Ralph Pitman, Jr. , Roger Davis '51, Mrs .&#13;
Davis, Rev. Lloyd Hunsley '37, Mrs. Hunsley Dick King ('41), Louis Croston, President Palmer and Don Poppen.&#13;
Dick King ('41), president of the Philadelphia group and member of the College&#13;
Board of Trustees and Mrs. King entertained President Palmer, Don Poppen and&#13;
Louis Croston at dinner in their home at&#13;
Chads Ford at noon on November 19th.&#13;
The accompanying picture was taken in&#13;
the King home. Rebecca King, in a Morning,s ide "T" shirt listens attentively to the&#13;
blandishments of President Palmer. Rebecca was two months old when the picture&#13;
was taken.&#13;
&#13;
OMAHA&#13;
The Omaha Club were hosts to Morningside Alumni faculty and friends at a coffee&#13;
hour following the Morningside vs. Omaha&#13;
University game in Omaha, September&#13;
16th.&#13;
President Tom Green '48 was in&#13;
charge of arrangements.&#13;
A Hawaiian dinner and dancing were&#13;
h eld later in the ev·e ning.&#13;
&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
Dr. Palmer had a meeting with Florida&#13;
Alumni in Miami in December. Charles&#13;
Cushman '11 made the arrangements for&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL The&#13;
Minneapolis - St. Paul alumni club had a&#13;
meeting in St. Paul on November 8th. Present from the college were A. W. Buckingham '39, public relations director and Mrs.&#13;
Buckingham (Marion Miller . .41) and Louis&#13;
H. Croston, alumni director and Mrs. Croston (Hazel Surber '29).&#13;
In attendance were Cecil Anderson '31,&#13;
Virginia Bailey '61, Ron Boulden '60, Gen&#13;
Metcalf Danforth '31, Wm. B. Danforth '30,&#13;
Esme Franzen '59, Gordon Fountain '59,&#13;
Frank Heilman '08, Florence Clark Heilman&#13;
'08, Carolyn Meyer '59, Marjorie Rowlands&#13;
Peterson '58, Roy Peterson '58, Gary Ritz&#13;
('60), Sharon Swanson Ritz ( '60), Kay&#13;
Long Sutton ('37 ), Mr. Sutton, and Cyril&#13;
Upham '15.&#13;
Gordon Fountain acted as Master of&#13;
Ceremonies. An election resulted in these&#13;
new officers for the coming year - President, Esme Franzen '59, Vice-Presidents,&#13;
Florence Clark Heilman '08, Cyril Upham&#13;
'15, Carolyn Meyer '59, Gary Ritz ('60),&#13;
and Secretary-Treasurer, Gordon Fountain&#13;
'59.&#13;
&#13;
Shown in photographs taken at the Minneapolis meeting are,: Top picture; Genevieve&#13;
Metcalf Danforth '31, Esme Franzen '59,&#13;
Gordon Fountain '59, Sharon Swanson Ritz&#13;
('60), and Gary Ritz ('60).&#13;
Center picture Don Boulden '60 at the&#13;
left, and Cyril Upham '15, at right.&#13;
Bottom picture, left to right; and for side&#13;
side of table; Sharon Swanson Ritz ('60),&#13;
Gary Ritz ('60), Roy Peterson '58, Marjorie&#13;
Rowlands Peterson '58, Carolyn Meyer '59,&#13;
this side of table facing away from camera,&#13;
Marian Miller Buckingham ('42), Kay Long&#13;
Sutton ('37), and Mr. Sutton.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE AUTHORS&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDER welcomes any reviews or notices concerning books authored by Morninsiders. An alumni&#13;
&#13;
book&#13;
&#13;
shelf has been started in the Alumni Office.&#13;
LONGHORNS BRING CULTURE&#13;
by August H. Schatz&#13;
&#13;
August H. Schatz '12 has written a book&#13;
Longhorns Bring Culture which is being&#13;
published by the Christopher Publishing&#13;
House of Boston.&#13;
From a revie·w of the book in the Sioux&#13;
City Sunday Journal, Louise Zerschling, reviewer, states "A&#13;
wealth of western&#13;
South Dakota history&#13;
of particular interest&#13;
is this Dakota territorial centennial year .&#13;
is provided in Longhorns Bring Culture&#13;
and because western&#13;
South Dakota was&#13;
America last true&#13;
"frontier" of the old&#13;
west this book wil&#13;
provide fascinating&#13;
reading to all devotees of western lore.&#13;
"The book is not fiction, but a most&#13;
readable history of the Black Hills ranching&#13;
area, compiled by Mr. Schatz through years&#13;
of research, from personal reports&#13;
of&#13;
Dakota pioneers, most of whom now are&#13;
dead, and from his own early day experiences.&#13;
"Mr. Schatz's own life represents that&#13;
type of American success story that has&#13;
proved the foundation of America's greatness, a type of success story that may&#13;
never be repeated by todays ease-accustomed young Americans. In fact, some of&#13;
the most charming sections of Long Horns&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Bring Culture - hinting at a true - life&#13;
story that could well be booklength - are&#13;
the tales Mr. Schatz included of his pioneer&#13;
parents.&#13;
&#13;
"Today, Mr. Schatz is a greyhaired, quiet&#13;
spoken and quick witted retired school&#13;
teacher. Few, if any, of his former st udents and fellow teachers here had the&#13;
slightest conception of his picturesque&#13;
background.&#13;
"For when this educator, who now has a&#13;
master's degree, decided at the age of 18&#13;
to go to college, h e had only 12 months of&#13;
formal schooling, and had none at all for&#13;
the preceding 11 years.&#13;
"Written with forthrightness and simplicity, and enlivened by flashes of Mr.&#13;
Schatz's inimitable humor and touches of&#13;
insight gained through his knowledge of&#13;
psycholoy, Long Horns Bring Culture is an&#13;
addition to the nation's western booklore&#13;
as well as a major contribution to South&#13;
Dakota's and the midwest's historical publications."&#13;
Mrs. Schatz (Isobel Webb '14) did the&#13;
indexing for the book. The book sells for&#13;
$4.75.&#13;
&#13;
NEW HORIZONS FOR&#13;
MANAGEMENT&#13;
Packard Wolle '40 is the author of a&#13;
book, New Horizons for Management, r ecently released by the National Institute&#13;
for Leadership.&#13;
&#13;
Packard received his master's and Doctor's degrees from American University&#13;
and is a government administrator on the&#13;
part time faculty at George Washington&#13;
University. He is an employee of the&#13;
Labor department.&#13;
In addition to the new book, he has&#13;
authored articles for the National Office&#13;
Management Association, has lectured at&#13;
the army command management school,&#13;
and has given navy executive lectures.&#13;
In his new book, Dr. Wolle points out&#13;
that a new form of management, which he&#13;
calls plural management, has been successfully employed by some large businesses.&#13;
It is his opioion that some of the principles employed in those firms of sharing&#13;
management responsibility should be applied in the federal gove. nment.&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
THE LEGACY FOR HIROSHIMA&#13;
Allen Brown '49, has finished a book in&#13;
collaboration with Dr. Edward Teller, widely&#13;
known as the "Father of the H-Bomb",&#13;
that will be published by Doubleday and&#13;
Company next March under the title : The&#13;
Legacy of Hiroshima.&#13;
Allen has been a journalist for ten years&#13;
following his tenure as editor of the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
He has worked as reporter, editor or columnist for such papers&#13;
as the Council Bluffs Nonpareil, Des&#13;
Moines Register and Tribune, San Francisco Examiner and the San Francisco&#13;
Chronicle. He is now a free lance wr iter&#13;
and lives in Mill Valley, California - Box&#13;
161.&#13;
&#13;
MANUAL FOR LAW&#13;
STENOGRAPHERS&#13;
Evangeline Sletwold ("25) of Chicago&#13;
has published and revised an expanded&#13;
second edition of MANUAL FOR LAW&#13;
STENOGRAPHERS.&#13;
The manual is designed to serve law stenographers and&#13;
secretaries, young educators who type their&#13;
&#13;
own documents, law office managers who&#13;
need a form book, lawyers who do not&#13;
have time to train inexperienced personnel,&#13;
teachers of secretarial subjects, and stenographers who seek an introduction to the&#13;
type of work done by law stenographers&#13;
and secretaries.&#13;
Miss Sletwold is a legal secretary of extensive experience. In addition to her association with the well-known law firm of&#13;
Heth, Lister &amp; Flynn, she originated and&#13;
taught the class in law stenography that&#13;
has been offered in three of the outstanding evening schools in Chicago. Her most&#13;
recent teaching association was with the&#13;
College of Commerce, DePaul University.&#13;
She was a charter member of Metropolitan&#13;
Business and Professional Women's Club&#13;
was the organizer of Legal Secretaries&#13;
association in Chicago. She has served as&#13;
chairman of the Career Advancement Committee of both organizations.&#13;
The book is obtainable at Burdette Smith&#13;
Company, 111 West Washington Street,&#13;
Chicago 2, Illinois and sells for $7.00 per&#13;
copy.&#13;
&#13;
ADELIA MacBETH RETIRES&#13;
Adelia Hill MacBeth '21, has retired after&#13;
25 years of teaching at the secondary and&#13;
junior high school level. Mrs. Mac Beth&#13;
was recognized in her home town paper as&#13;
"quick to defend youth, when discussing&#13;
juvenile delinquency, and emphasizes that&#13;
parents and teachers must continue to be&#13;
patient, as they guide their youth with love&#13;
and understanding."&#13;
Mrs. MacBeth lives in Maxwell, Iowa.&#13;
Her son Ed Hemenway, class of '50, and&#13;
whose picture appears with the Des Moines&#13;
group in this issue of the Morningsider, is&#13;
Distributive Education Coordinator in the&#13;
Des Moines school.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
VOL. XX&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDER&#13;
Dece mber, 196 1&#13;
&#13;
No. 2&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GIVE $54,386 IN&#13;
FUND YEAR ENDING JULY 31, 1961&#13;
LIVING ENDOW. STARTS 21st YEAR&#13;
In the years 1940 and 1941 a dedicated&#13;
group of Morningside alumni corresponded&#13;
and later met together to set up Morningside's Living Endowment Fund. The first&#13;
fund year ended in 1942. At the outset&#13;
pledge cards were distributed and pledges&#13;
obtained for yearly contributions.&#13;
The fund was named Living Endowment&#13;
because a yearly contribution was considered to be the equivalent of interest on&#13;
regular endowment. For example a gift of&#13;
$100.00 is the equivalent of 5% interest on&#13;
$2,000.00 of regular endowment, a gift of&#13;
$10.00 is the equivalent of the interest on&#13;
$200.00 of regular endowment, or one of&#13;
$1,000.00 is equivalent to the interest on&#13;
$20,000 regular endowment.&#13;
Regular endowment is that money given&#13;
to the college through the years, designated&#13;
as regular endowment, and which cannot be&#13;
spent. Only the income from it can be&#13;
used for college operations. So Living Endowment makes it possible for an alumnus/a who cannot give $10,000, $2,000, or&#13;
$20,000 to endowment to give the equivalent&#13;
of the interest from such a sum.&#13;
Some Morningsiders have participated in&#13;
the fund for all of the twent y years. Many&#13;
others have contributed every year since&#13;
their graduation, or since leaving Morningside. Some others have perfect records but&#13;
started later than the initial year.&#13;
Approximately $100,000 has come to&#13;
Morningside in the past twenty years&#13;
through the Living Endowment Fund. The&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
fund offers every Alumnus/ a an opportunity to support his or her belief in a program of higher education, and to participate in Morningside's role in that program.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 1915&#13;
FIRST IN PARTICIPATION&#13;
The class of 1915 bettered its participation percentage in the 1960-61 Living Endowment Fund to again top all other&#13;
classes.&#13;
Last year 34.6 % of the graduates and&#13;
former members of the class participated&#13;
in the Living Endowment Fund and 38.4%&#13;
participated in all alumni giving. The comparative figures for last year were 31.5%&#13;
to Living Endowment and 35.2% to all&#13;
alumni giving.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 1911 IN 2ND PLACE&#13;
In second place was the Class of 1911&#13;
who jumped from 14th place in the previous&#13;
years fund. They had a 10.9 % increase in&#13;
Living Endowment participation and a&#13;
13.6% increase in total fund par ticipiation. There were other very notable increases and some decreases.&#13;
The following table shows how the&#13;
classes finished in the 1960-61 fund year&#13;
ending July 31, 1961. The percentage&#13;
figure indicates the ratio of how many&#13;
members of a class (graduates and former&#13;
students) gave in propor tion to the number&#13;
of the class on the current mailing list.&#13;
&#13;
PARTICIPATION BY CLASSES&#13;
1960-61&#13;
&#13;
PARTICIPATION BY STATES&#13;
Number of Alumni&#13;
Contributing&#13;
&#13;
1959-60&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
1915&#13;
34.6 38.4&#13;
31 5 35.2&#13;
1 I&#13;
2&#13;
1911&#13;
28.9 31.6&#13;
18.0 18.0 14 I&#13;
3&#13;
1904&#13;
23.8 23.8&#13;
14 3 14.3 21 I&#13;
4&#13;
1905&#13;
23.3 26.7&#13;
15 2 15 2 20 I&#13;
5&#13;
1913&#13;
22.7 28.8&#13;
20.3 26 6 10 I&#13;
6&#13;
1902&#13;
22.2 22.2&#13;
12.5 12 5 26 I&#13;
7&#13;
1922&#13;
20.7 26.5&#13;
21.4 26.8&#13;
7 D&#13;
8&#13;
1918&#13;
19.7 22.9&#13;
20 6 21.1&#13;
9 D&#13;
9&#13;
1917&#13;
19.0 22.2&#13;
26.1 30.5&#13;
4 D&#13;
10 to 1901&#13;
18.8 18.8&#13;
28.6 28.6&#13;
3 D&#13;
11&#13;
1914&#13;
18.2 18.8&#13;
30.4 30.4&#13;
2 D&#13;
12&#13;
1906&#13;
16.7 20.8&#13;
18.5 18 5 13 D&#13;
13&#13;
1926&#13;
16.1 1.76&#13;
16.7 20 3 17 D&#13;
14&#13;
1920&#13;
16.0 16.0&#13;
25 0 28.8&#13;
5 D&#13;
15&#13;
1919&#13;
15.7 15.7&#13;
23.3 24.7&#13;
6 D&#13;
16&#13;
1910&#13;
15.6 15.6&#13;
20.7 20.7&#13;
8 D&#13;
17&#13;
1908&#13;
15.1 33 3&#13;
18.7 344 12 D&#13;
18&#13;
1955&#13;
15.1 16.1&#13;
11.4 16.7 33 I&#13;
19&#13;
1928&#13;
1 5.0 1 7 .3&#13;
9.5 16.1 40 I&#13;
20&#13;
1923&#13;
14.9 22.3&#13;
17.6 25 3 15 D&#13;
21&#13;
1921&#13;
14.9 19.3&#13;
20.2 21.2 11 D&#13;
22&#13;
14.8 16.7&#13;
1931&#13;
12.8 18.9 23 I&#13;
23&#13;
193S&#13;
13.7 14.5&#13;
6.6 10.2 4 8 I&#13;
24&#13;
1903&#13;
13.6 18.1&#13;
17.4 17.4 16 D&#13;
25&#13;
1930&#13;
13.4 16.1&#13;
11.4 18.0 32 I&#13;
26&#13;
1943&#13;
12.9 15.3&#13;
16.4 18.0 1 8 D&#13;
27&#13;
1916&#13;
12.7 12.7&#13;
12.5 12.5 27 I&#13;
28&#13;
1936&#13;
12.6 14.8&#13;
13.0 15.3 22 D&#13;
29&#13;
1933&#13;
12.6 14 3&#13;
11.5 16.1 31 D&#13;
30&#13;
1958&#13;
11.3 15.6&#13;
6 .5 10.2 49 I&#13;
31&#13;
1940&#13;
11.2 12.7&#13;
9.4 12.7 41 I&#13;
32&#13;
1925&#13;
11.0 13.9&#13;
10.6 17.7 38 I&#13;
33&#13;
1924&#13;
10.9 17.8&#13;
12.6 15.5 25 D&#13;
34&#13;
1927&#13;
10.7 16.4&#13;
11.3 17.0 34 D&#13;
35&#13;
1942&#13;
10 .7 11.8&#13;
8.8 11.5 43 I&#13;
36&#13;
1941&#13;
10.6 14.5&#13;
12.6 17.0 24 D&#13;
37&#13;
1946&#13;
10.6 12 9&#13;
1 2.1 14.9 28 D&#13;
38&#13;
1939&#13;
10.6 12.3&#13;
11.3 13.3 35 D&#13;
39&#13;
1948&#13;
10.5 11.1&#13;
11.6 11.6 30 D&#13;
40&#13;
1959&#13;
10.4 13.7&#13;
6.0&#13;
9 .0 51 I&#13;
41&#13;
1909&#13;
10.0 10 0&#13;
15 4 17.9 19 D&#13;
42&#13;
1957&#13;
9.9· 11.3&#13;
7.4 12 3 46 I&#13;
43&#13;
1935&#13;
9.8&#13;
9.8&#13;
4 .8&#13;
7.3 52 I&#13;
44&#13;
1907&#13;
9.75 9.75&#13;
10.9 12.2 37 D&#13;
45&#13;
194 7&#13;
8 .8 11.8&#13;
10.6 12.7 39 D&#13;
46&#13;
1929&#13;
8.7 11.2&#13;
7 .8 13.8 45 I&#13;
47&#13;
1949&#13;
8.3 10.5&#13;
8 .0 11.4 44 I&#13;
48&#13;
1932&#13;
8 .1 11.2&#13;
8.9 11.1 42 D&#13;
49&#13;
7.8&#13;
1945&#13;
8.5&#13;
2.4&#13;
43 58 I&#13;
50&#13;
1960&#13;
7.7&#13;
9 .9&#13;
**&#13;
51&#13;
1912&#13;
7.4&#13;
9.0&#13;
11.8 11.8 29 D&#13;
52&#13;
1934&#13;
7.3&#13;
8.1&#13;
11.1 19.3 36 D&#13;
53&#13;
6.3&#13;
1953&#13;
8.5&#13;
2.9 6 .12 56 I&#13;
54&#13;
1956&#13;
5.2&#13;
9 .6&#13;
64&#13;
9.2 50 D&#13;
55&#13;
5.16 6.45&#13;
1944&#13;
2.6&#13;
3 .2 57 I&#13;
56&#13;
1954&#13;
4.3&#13;
6.4&#13;
4 .4&#13;
4 .6 53 D&#13;
57&#13;
1950&#13;
4.3 4 .85&#13;
3 .9&#13;
62 54 I&#13;
58&#13;
1951&#13;
4 .2&#13;
4.9&#13;
3.6 5.86 55 I&#13;
59&#13;
1952&#13;
3.7&#13;
5.2&#13;
6 .7 10.6 47 D&#13;
60&#13;
1937&#13;
2.02&#13;
4 .1&#13;
1.5&#13;
9 .0 59 I&#13;
Greatest percentage jump 1902 from 1 2.5 to 22.2&#13;
1904 from 14.3 to 23.8&#13;
1901 from 18.0 to 28.9&#13;
Largest number of contributors&#13;
LE ALL&#13;
1949&#13;
26&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
81&#13;
ALABAMA&#13;
1&#13;
ALASKA&#13;
1&#13;
ARIZONA&#13;
13&#13;
ARKANSAS&#13;
CALIFORNIA&#13;
73&#13;
COLOltADO&#13;
14&#13;
CONNECTICUT&#13;
4&#13;
DELAWARE&#13;
1&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
11&#13;
GEORGIA&#13;
2&#13;
HAWAII&#13;
4&#13;
IDAHO&#13;
1&#13;
ILLINOIS&#13;
48&#13;
I NDIANA&#13;
9&#13;
IOWA&#13;
225&#13;
KANSAS&#13;
10&#13;
KENTUCKY&#13;
4&#13;
LOUISIANA&#13;
1&#13;
MAINE&#13;
MARYLAND&#13;
5&#13;
MASSACHUSETTS&#13;
5&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
19&#13;
MINNESOTA&#13;
20&#13;
MISSISSIPPI&#13;
MISSOURI&#13;
5&#13;
MONTANA&#13;
4&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
25&#13;
NEVADA&#13;
1&#13;
NEW H AMPSHIRE&#13;
1&#13;
NEW JERSEY&#13;
17&#13;
NEW MEXICO&#13;
1&#13;
NEW YORK&#13;
19&#13;
NORTH CAROLINA&#13;
5&#13;
NORTH DAKOTA&#13;
2&#13;
OHIO&#13;
17&#13;
OKLAHOMA&#13;
1&#13;
6&#13;
OREGON&#13;
PENNSYLVANIA.&#13;
4&#13;
RHODE ISLAND&#13;
1&#13;
SOUTH CAROLINA&#13;
SOUTH DAKOTA&#13;
27&#13;
TENNESSEE&#13;
3&#13;
TEXAS&#13;
4&#13;
1&#13;
UTAH&#13;
1&#13;
VERMONT&#13;
4&#13;
VIRGINIA&#13;
WASHINGTON&#13;
6&#13;
WEST VIRGINIA&#13;
9&#13;
WISCONSI N&#13;
4&#13;
WYOMING&#13;
6&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C. 2&#13;
&#13;
101&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
728&#13;
&#13;
165&#13;
&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
214&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
13&#13;
1&#13;
79&#13;
18&#13;
4&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
1&#13;
56&#13;
10&#13;
273&#13;
10&#13;
8&#13;
3&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
24&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
4&#13;
29&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
17&#13;
2&#13;
22&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
26&#13;
1&#13;
7&#13;
7&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
979&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
AVERAGE LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
GIFT IS $13.18&#13;
The size of the average gift to Living Endowment for the fund year year ending&#13;
J uly 31, 1961 was $13.18 per person contributing.&#13;
638 is the number of contr ibutions and&#13;
does not represent the number of contributors, because of one contribution representing two alumni in many cases, and because the June Class of 1961 is fi gured as&#13;
one and not 107.&#13;
The total number of contr ibutors without the Senior class was 814. Below is a&#13;
breakdown of the 638 contr ibutions.&#13;
Si ze of&#13;
Contribut ion&#13;
$&#13;
&#13;
Where Hu sba nd a nd Wi fe Are&#13;
B oth Alum s, Gift is shown as&#13;
on e Contribution&#13;
In This&#13;
Breakdown&#13;
&#13;
.7 5&#13;
1.00&#13;
2.00&#13;
2 .5 0&#13;
3.00&#13;
4 .00&#13;
5.00&#13;
6.00&#13;
7.00&#13;
8.00&#13;
10.00&#13;
11.20&#13;
12.00&#13;
12.50&#13;
15.00&#13;
20.00&#13;
22. 00&#13;
21.00&#13;
25.00&#13;
29.00&#13;
30.00&#13;
35.00&#13;
40.00&#13;
50.00&#13;
70.00&#13;
75.00&#13;
78.00&#13;
100.00&#13;
200.00&#13;
&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
40&#13;
34&#13;
1&#13;
14&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
1 54&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
20 2&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
22&#13;
23&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
77&#13;
1&#13;
6&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
638&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GIVE $54,386.25&#13;
IN YEAR ENDING JULY 31&#13;
Morningside Alumni g ave $54,386.25 to&#13;
the Living Endowment Alumni Fund, the&#13;
MacCollin Organ fund, the Fine Arts&#13;
Building fund, operations, scholarships, endowment, Charles City College fund, and&#13;
the Class of 1908 Geology Fund in the&#13;
fiscal year ending July 3,1, 1961.&#13;
For this report all alumni giving has&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
been placed in two categories for figuring&#13;
class participation percentages.&#13;
One category is the Living Endowment&#13;
Alumni Fund. The other categor y is all&#13;
alumni giving including Living Endowment.&#13;
Class percentages are based on all graduate&#13;
and former student names on our current&#13;
mailing list. The percentages are figured&#13;
separately for Living Endowment and for&#13;
total Alumni giving.&#13;
In the case of husband and wife both&#13;
being alumni, and belonging to different&#13;
class years, credit is given to each for one&#13;
half the contribution.&#13;
A number following a name in the Living&#13;
Endowment fund list indicates the individual has contributed to the Living Endowment fund for that number of years. Numbers are used only for Living Endowment&#13;
and do not apply to "Other Giving". Five&#13;
year s total is the minimum number of&#13;
years noted. Consequently there are some&#13;
alumni in the "Other Giving" list without&#13;
a number after their name who have very&#13;
fine records of giving to Living Endowment and whose 60-61 contribution was&#13;
designated for a different fund.&#13;
All titles, as Doctor, Reverend, etc. have&#13;
been omi tted in the following lists.&#13;
&#13;
ABBY EASTER SEAL CHAIRMAN&#13;
Abigail Van Buren, "Dear Abby", is&#13;
National Chairman of the Easter Seal Campaign for 1962.&#13;
Author of the widely syndicated newspaper column "Dear Abby", she is Mrs.&#13;
Morton Phillips (Pauline Esther Friedman&#13;
40) . Abby is the donor of an annual&#13;
scholarship to a worthy Morningside student.&#13;
&#13;
ST AN GREIGG ELECTED TO&#13;
CITY COUNCIL&#13;
Stanley Greigg '54, Dean of Men and&#13;
instructor in history at Morningside College&#13;
was elected in November, to the five member City Council of Sioux City. Sioux City&#13;
operates under the city manager type of&#13;
government. He will ser ve a four year&#13;
term .&#13;
&#13;
LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
1890's&#13;
Emma Petersmier Cook 7&#13;
Frank W. Mitchell&#13;
W . B. Empey 12&#13;
1902&#13;
Guy B. Frary 6&#13;
Ethel Walker Trimble Loftus&#13;
1903&#13;
Hiram Ellis&#13;
A. R. Toothaker 5&#13;
Flora Dunlap Tiss&#13;
1904&#13;
R. D. Acheson&#13;
J. Ralph Magee&#13;
Mabel Killam Maynard&#13;
18&#13;
Fred B. Williams&#13;
F. Stanley Carson&#13;
1905&#13;
Myrtilla Cook L e wis 19&#13;
Pearl Boddy McKercher&#13;
Coralinn&#13;
Lockin Miller&#13;
Mrs. E. C. Richards 10&#13;
Walter Sloan 10&#13;
Mrs. Virginia Fair Trimble&#13;
5&#13;
Emma Fair Young 12&#13;
1906&#13;
0. M. Foote 16&#13;
Elizabeth E. Johnson 10&#13;
Gertrude Crossan Kindig&#13;
6&#13;
R. G lenn Hinkle r 10&#13;
1907&#13;
Ella Dickson Blacks hire&#13;
Genevieve Howard Haves 10&#13;
Mabel Haskins Maynard&#13;
Mabel Vesta Towner 10&#13;
1908&#13;
Lura Matteson Ande rson 16&#13;
Thomas C. Anderson 16&#13;
H . J . Richards&#13;
Emma Cain Russell 1 3&#13;
H. H. Sawyer 7&#13;
1909&#13;
Arthur R. Bastian 8&#13;
ldabelle Lewis Main 7&#13;
Alvah Miller&#13;
14&#13;
Julia Royse&#13;
1910&#13;
J. H. Bridenbaug h 18&#13;
Irvin Engle&#13;
May Wood Kixmiller&#13;
Evelyn Denkmen Lester&#13;
D. P. Shull 6&#13;
1911&#13;
Mabel McCreery&#13;
Becker&#13;
J . H . Berkstresser 7&#13;
Jennie Nelson Bridenbaugh&#13;
18&#13;
F. H . Chandler&#13;
Frances Horn Chandler&#13;
Bessie A. Dunbar&#13;
Hazel Deno Horton&#13;
H H. Hudson 15&#13;
Vivian McFarland McGee 6&#13;
Edna E. Randolph 11&#13;
Maria Wiese&#13;
1912&#13;
Roscoe H. Carter&#13;
Florence Brown Clark&#13;
W. E. Ellison 6&#13;
Florence Anthony Griffen&#13;
George Wickens 6&#13;
1913&#13;
Ella S. Campbell 15&#13;
Harry A . Chipman 5&#13;
J. H. Edge&#13;
William C. Evans&#13;
16&#13;
Lavancha Marie&#13;
Wood Green 6&#13;
Hazel Shumasker Hudson&#13;
15&#13;
Florence Montgomery Kingsbury 9&#13;
Horace B. Merten&#13;
Eva Lezar Potter 7&#13;
John Ralston 13&#13;
&#13;
Jean Whittemore Reynolds&#13;
Anna Rieke 9&#13;
Catherine Elliott&#13;
Sayer 15&#13;
Leroy B. Scott 12&#13;
Helen W edgwood 18&#13;
1914&#13;
Mitchell B. B ri ggs l1&#13;
Juanita Walker Buchman 7&#13;
Lucille Morgan Coombs 20&#13;
C laudia Armbright&#13;
Engle&#13;
Myron Insko 19&#13;
Alice Klippel 12&#13;
John Kolp 8&#13;
Laura Postin Sanborn&#13;
18&#13;
Fred Schriever 19&#13;
Ali ce Thornburg Sm it h&#13;
Alice Dewey Vennink&#13;
7&#13;
1915&#13;
Olive Jones Bleam&#13;
19&#13;
J. L. B ridenbaugh 13&#13;
Mabel Irwin Burgess 15&#13;
Dora Carl son Cervin&#13;
14&#13;
Marie Dewitt Deffenbaugh 11&#13;
James I. Dolliver 16&#13;
William E . Drury&#13;
H. L. Dunham 20&#13;
Mabel King Greening&#13;
9&#13;
Joseph D. Hale&#13;
Ethe l Collier Hawley 8&#13;
Allan B. Klie n 7&#13;
W. H. Payne G&#13;
Ralph Prichard&#13;
11&#13;
Carl W. Sass 17&#13;
Bonnie Robinson Schoonover 9&#13;
Cyril U pha m&#13;
Robert R. Vernon 20&#13;
1916&#13;
F. Earl Burgess 1 5&#13;
Loi s M. Crouch&#13;
Oscar I. Hall&#13;
Leslie B. Logan 7&#13;
G. B. Patrick 19&#13;
Katherine&#13;
Gow Swanson&#13;
Mary Wedgwood 16&#13;
1917&#13;
Dorothy&#13;
Steele Apland 5&#13;
Clara Swain Dailey&#13;
Cornelia McBurney French&#13;
Anna Ande rson H ayes&#13;
Marie Sebern Kolp 8&#13;
Mae Wickens Nettleton&#13;
Gailord S. Ome r&#13;
Neva Hawk Ralston 13&#13;
Fern Beache m Reynolds&#13;
Millie Corneliussen Robertson&#13;
5&#13;
Dona ld Walton 20&#13;
Ruth Gillie Warnes&#13;
1918&#13;
G. E. Barks 20&#13;
Clara Lewis Berkstresser 7&#13;
J. Finley Christ&#13;
7&#13;
Horace D eWalt 9&#13;
Frances Kolp Gingles&#13;
13&#13;
Hazel Barrow Ha r t 20&#13;
Agnes Mae Fry Holdren&#13;
K athinca Nielson Kingsbury 20&#13;
Alcie Miller Lindh or st 15&#13;
Marian Johnson Rieke 10&#13;
&#13;
William T. Warnes&#13;
&#13;
Rerbetta Bixby Yo ung&#13;
1919&#13;
Beulah Edginton&#13;
9&#13;
Ruth Reid Griffith 8&#13;
Fern McKinney Hinkle 10&#13;
F. A. Kingsbury&#13;
20&#13;
gertrude&#13;
Dykstra Kolberg&#13;
Agnes M. McCreery&#13;
Lena McDonald&#13;
12&#13;
Dorothy Owen McKay&#13;
7&#13;
Lois Knapp Nelson&#13;
E. M. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Miriam&#13;
&#13;
Fish&#13;
&#13;
Wassenaar&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
Evan Ausman&#13;
Axel J. B eck&#13;
&#13;
Eva Treman&#13;
&#13;
Cary&#13;
&#13;
Martha&#13;
&#13;
Christ 20&#13;
Dragoo 8&#13;
Orin D . Goodrich&#13;
Verle A. Hart 20&#13;
Amos W. Hart man&#13;
Wayne R. Hilmer 16&#13;
Gladys Knapp Luse&#13;
John H. McBurney&#13;
Leland P. Sutherland 11&#13;
1921&#13;
George I. Back&#13;
Beatrice Bond&#13;
Floyd A. Conne r 9&#13;
Arthur J. Coombs 20&#13;
Loren e Williams DeWitt 5&#13;
George Dunn 6&#13;
John Erwin Felle r 9&#13;
Harold R. Hartley&#13;
Elsie E. L a n g&#13;
Esther Goods ite Levin&#13;
Adelia Hill MacBeth&#13;
Gladys Armbright Scheffel&#13;
Russell R. S mit h&#13;
Evelyn Balkema Troutman&#13;
B ess ie R eed Walton&#13;
20&#13;
Harry E. Whyte&#13;
11&#13;
1922&#13;
Minnie C. Ander son 17&#13;
Harry E. Benz 20&#13;
Mary Decker Benz 20&#13;
&#13;
Lavina&#13;
&#13;
Elsiee&#13;
&#13;
Bennington Conner&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Leon E. Hickman 20&#13;
Iris Knight&#13;
Gladys Bradley McBurney&#13;
Zelda Bond McNall y&#13;
Ma bel Rutledge Morsch&#13;
Edna&#13;
Bekins Moorhead&#13;
18&#13;
18&#13;
Park W . Moorhead&#13;
Golda Kane Moser&#13;
16&#13;
Don N issen 14&#13;
E. F. Rankin&#13;
&#13;
L l oyd&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Lydia&#13;
&#13;
Scheerer&#13;
Acklin Scheerer&#13;
Wedgwood&#13;
14&#13;
Bixby young&#13;
1923&#13;
Gertrude&#13;
OverackerCarter&#13;
Genevieve Stamper C line 20&#13;
Helen Graef Cobb&#13;
Roy Cox 5&#13;
Ruth Lindsay Cox 5&#13;
Cecil W . Derivan G&#13;
Evelyn Stollard Hartley&#13;
Vesta Taylor Ketels 17&#13;
B. 0. L yle 8&#13;
Esther Waterhouse&#13;
Parson 1 8&#13;
Fred B. Smith 5&#13;
Happie E. Smith&#13;
5&#13;
Glen Weldon&#13;
Luci lle Vi cker s 15&#13;
1924&#13;
Margaret&#13;
Ellis Crown&#13;
Paul C. Ellis&#13;
Ray C. Hawley&#13;
Mayme Hoyt Hickman&#13;
20&#13;
H. E. Hutchins on (Hon)&#13;
7&#13;
Paul E. McMaster&#13;
Paul A . Moody&#13;
Josephine Steele Pecaut 11&#13;
Russell B. Pecaut&#13;
11&#13;
Annette M. Sheel&#13;
Irene Truckenmiller&#13;
&#13;
1925&#13;
Lester Benz 18&#13;
Marguerite&#13;
Held Benz&#13;
Viola Benz 19&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
Paul Coombs 6&#13;
Sarah Drewry Coombs 6&#13;
Haze l L owry Funkhouser 6&#13;
Kenneth Funkhouser&#13;
6&#13;
Rex Fountain&#13;
A. A. Johnson&#13;
Helen Surber Johnson&#13;
Max Kopstein 19&#13;
Miriam KAmphoefner Larson&#13;
Hugh Marsh&#13;
Wilma Trumbull 10&#13;
Alice Robbins Wicke ns 6&#13;
Mildred Torbert Leamer 6&#13;
1926&#13;
Gertrude Rawson Brinkman&#13;
Kenneth C. Chinn 5&#13;
Margaret Coleman C ra ry&#13;
Charles&#13;
Emer son 13&#13;
Ida Bryan Forbes&#13;
Doris Giehm Fountain&#13;
Mrs. Clyde R. Griffen&#13;
Kenneth R. Hall 10&#13;
Earl E. Josten&#13;
18&#13;
Frank Leamer&#13;
6&#13;
Lucille Lingaard Marsh&#13;
Harvey Peterson&#13;
Joy L. Smith&#13;
Homer Smothers&#13;
Mrs. L avinia Smothers&#13;
Forest Mosier TePaske 1 8&#13;
H enry J. T ePaske 18&#13;
Margaret T iedeman 13&#13;
Page Lohman Watson&#13;
Henry D. Wright&#13;
Mabel Hartley Zwald 16&#13;
&#13;
1927&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Seward Anderson&#13;
Charles W. Bach&#13;
Robert R. Barnard 1 1&#13;
Lenore B en edict Blythe&#13;
Claire M ilne Britten&#13;
Orph a Kudrle DeMots 11&#13;
J. C. Ducommun 20&#13;
Mae Asmu ssen Hall 10&#13;
Mabel Hoyt 6&#13;
Margaret McIntos h Hunt 1 8&#13;
Judson Large&#13;
Bernitas Wolle Lynk&#13;
Irwin Miller&#13;
·&#13;
Lone lle Bushnell Wright&#13;
Zola Bucher S mith 5&#13;
1928&#13;
Earl J. Benz&#13;
O. W. Brand 5&#13;
Claude Brown 6&#13;
Lawrence Cain&#13;
Ralph Eberly&#13;
Florence Spencer Forchtner&#13;
A. M. Forsberg&#13;
Mrs. M. E. Graber&#13;
Max Hughes 8&#13;
Mabel Nissen Haas&#13;
Julia La Grone 11&#13;
Horace Koch&#13;
Mabel Orvig Littl e&#13;
Helen Tiedema n McDonald&#13;
Anna Mae Hurlbut Mathre&#13;
Ruth Pattison Nea l&#13;
Neva Crews Shellenberger&#13;
Mildred Sweet&#13;
Hal T homas&#13;
William Van Schreven&#13;
&#13;
1929&#13;
&#13;
D erwood A. Beck&#13;
Dorothy Bogen&#13;
Hazel Surber Cr oston 6&#13;
Lyle D. Culve r&#13;
Ann a Be r ger Gourley&#13;
Dale F . Gr aber&#13;
Anne Aalfs Sch aaf 20&#13;
Margaret De Witt Smith&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Gail Smith&#13;
Elizabeth Turner&#13;
C. B. Vizas 5&#13;
Elva Reimers Wala lce 5&#13;
Merwin Zwald 16&#13;
Ru t h Schule r Stewart 9&#13;
1930&#13;
Harold B artz&#13;
Margaret Quirin Bartz&#13;
Donald C. B rodie&#13;
Richard Carlyon&#13;
Louis H. Croston 6&#13;
William B. Danforth&#13;
Mrs. John Erickson&#13;
Ardins Bergeson Gilbert&#13;
Nath an Goldberg&#13;
Margaret King Hilburn&#13;
Harold B . Johnson&#13;
Burdella Asmus Litz 11&#13;
Wallace Lowry&#13;
Hazel Elliff McVey&#13;
Fay Moeller 5&#13;
Eleanor Sterling Robertson&#13;
E. H e nry Running&#13;
Thelma Jager&#13;
Schaper 15&#13;
Victor Schuldt&#13;
Carol Larsen Sh afer&#13;
Gla dys Erickson Thorsheim&#13;
1931&#13;
Dorothy Anderson Ahrens&#13;
Lois Boyer Beam&#13;
Margaret Gray Benson&#13;
Inez Waterman Callahan&#13;
Joseph H. Castle 6&#13;
Mabel Springer Castle 6&#13;
Genevieve Metcalf D a nforth&#13;
Florence Down&#13;
Arthur Foreman&#13;
Helen Pa rrot Foreman&#13;
Neuma n L. G runstad 7&#13;
H. Milo Hall&#13;
Carl Linden&#13;
Muriel Harrington Moore&#13;
Robert Munger 18&#13;
E ldred L. Raun&#13;
Wendell B. Seward 19&#13;
Edward H. Sibley 5&#13;
Gladys Lopan Treptow&#13;
Nellie Ch ilton Va n Wyngarden 10&#13;
Virgil K. Williams 11&#13;
Inez A rche r Wolz&#13;
Opan Van Dyke Van Schreven&#13;
&#13;
1932&#13;
&#13;
Norman Barke r&#13;
June Bonderson Brainard&#13;
Lucilie Bryan&#13;
Mar vin Burgess 10&#13;
Helen Down Carson&#13;
D. George Davies 6&#13;
Mary Elizabeth Baker DeGarmo&#13;
Edgar J. Otto&#13;
Joyce Woodford Ramsey&#13;
Homer Sch aper 15&#13;
Robert D. Thomas 6&#13;
Nich olas Tiedeman&#13;
Arthur Van Wyngarden&#13;
10&#13;
1933&#13;
Rich ard Aeck&#13;
Katherine C. Blazer&#13;
Janice Hagy Coffie&#13;
Lois Crane 5&#13;
Wayne E. Dennis&#13;
William Drommer&#13;
Virginia H unter Gaspar&#13;
Roe ne Brooks Horgan 5&#13;
Maude Kusia n Louk&#13;
Ruth McDonald 16&#13;
Muriel Bathoo Nash 5&#13;
Louise McCracken Paulson 15&#13;
Ruth H ulse Schuldt&#13;
Frances Figert Skinne r&#13;
&#13;
Kenne th T . Wilcox&#13;
1934&#13;
Verl Crow&#13;
Harold Decker&#13;
Helen e Crenshaw Decker&#13;
John E. Evans 8&#13;
John E. Griffen 6&#13;
Gleva Binger Hansen&#13;
Audrey Stromberg Kolbe&#13;
Alice Morrison Norwood&#13;
Lucille Henderson Parry&#13;
1935&#13;
Anthony Blankers 13&#13;
Elizabeth Bliss&#13;
Charles W. Corkhill 9&#13;
Jas. J . D eRoos&#13;
Dorothy Hopkinson Drommer&#13;
Frank E. G ibbs 7&#13;
Eth el Hendenbergh 17&#13;
Helen Brodie Johnston&#13;
Lillia n Hyde Jones&#13;
F. Merlin Kolbe&#13;
Laird Loveland&#13;
Jason L. Saunderson&#13;
Marcella Locke Shultz&#13;
James L. Wilfong&#13;
1936&#13;
Eleanor Taft Allen&#13;
Julia Beresk in&#13;
Nema W esner Davies 6&#13;
Jennie Williams DeRoos&#13;
Max Gaspar&#13;
Laurie Gillespie&#13;
0. B. K e iser&#13;
Esther White Kindig&#13;
Marvin J. Klass 10&#13;
L. V. Kuhl&#13;
Margaret Mesing Larsen 16&#13;
John Lindblade&#13;
Winona E . Lohff&#13;
lO&#13;
Willis Phelps&#13;
6&#13;
William Rose&#13;
Beverly Wertz Sm it h&#13;
Mildred Mouw Walke r&#13;
&#13;
1937&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude E . Bale 10&#13;
Harold Dayton&#13;
Pe arl Wagner&#13;
1938&#13;
Francis Bakken 6&#13;
Vera Hayes Campbell 7&#13;
Wilfred Crabb&#13;
Mrs. Louis Goldber g&#13;
Russell Guster&#13;
Robert J. Hilke r 8&#13;
Rowena Bennett H urlburt&#13;
Margaret Lease 15&#13;
Frank Logan&#13;
Anita Haafke Marlowe&#13;
Edgar McCracken 6&#13;
Kenneth E. Metcalf 8&#13;
Olsen&#13;
Walter&#13;
James C. Olson&#13;
Lyle Poyzer&#13;
Mildred Eubank Vasey&#13;
7&#13;
1939&#13;
Albe rta Seavey Anthony 17&#13;
Cl ement E . Baldwin&#13;
Norman K. Brady&#13;
A. W. Buckingham&#13;
Carol Held Burr&#13;
Ruth Worrell Clayton&#13;
12&#13;
Ch arl es C. Howard&#13;
Virginia Smith McLain&#13;
Helen Pearson McCracken 6&#13;
Verna Brown Phelps 6&#13;
Ron Rawson 11&#13;
M. Dale Rogers 5&#13;
Virginia Thomas&#13;
1940&#13;
B. Roy Brown&#13;
&#13;
LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
Leona Kecker Crabb&#13;
Deane R. Flett&#13;
Eleanor Jones 11&#13;
Esther Friedman Lederer&#13;
7&#13;
Margaret Gusteson Loettrle&#13;
Kathryn Kolp Menke&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
Anne Larsen Olsen&#13;
Pauline Friedman Phillips 14&#13;
Robert Ruleman 16&#13;
Millicent Jensen Saunderson&#13;
Alfred P . Strozdas&#13;
Bruce Van D e Mark 14&#13;
Vera Farrington Olson&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Clayton&#13;
Virginia Davi s Coughenour&#13;
Ruth Olsen Granstrom&#13;
Rolland Grefe 10&#13;
Dale M. Harter&#13;
Miriam Hartley&#13;
19&#13;
Frances Forsbe rg Keiser&#13;
Richard V. King&#13;
Ila Eberly Lindsay&#13;
William Bruce Lindsay&#13;
Mary Hinchman Mohr&#13;
Alice Swanson Otto&#13;
Lillian Pickersgill&#13;
8&#13;
Max H. Stern 8&#13;
Charles Wert&#13;
Anna Zenkovich&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
H elen Haffits Behar&#13;
Norm a n Cla rk S&#13;
Joy Momsen Corkhill 9&#13;
Frank Curry&#13;
H a rvey Durfey&#13;
Mary A. Fiddick&#13;
11&#13;
Helen Meredith&#13;
Haala nd&#13;
Dal e Harris&#13;
Ma rjorie Walton Hi edeman&#13;
Andrew Cyril John son 5&#13;
Stan Newman 5&#13;
D oro t hv Ann Clem Otte n&#13;
A nne Madison Wallace 7&#13;
Ch a rl es Q . Wa ll ace 7&#13;
Dwight Ebelheiser&#13;
&#13;
1951.&#13;
&#13;
Jean Smith Baldner&#13;
Carol yn Held D a vies&#13;
H e rschel J . Evans&#13;
Lyle Fi tzge ra ld&#13;
Virginia Coo k Fritz 5&#13;
Doris Leivestadt&#13;
Gist&#13;
Warren H eld&#13;
Joan B eckett Jacobs&#13;
Don McCa rthy&#13;
0. Nels on Pri ce&#13;
Clair C. Scott 5&#13;
B e ve rl y Spielman&#13;
Darrel Warner&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
1943&#13;
&#13;
Francis L. Brockman 8&#13;
Demetra Gearas Constantine&#13;
11&#13;
Mary Cruikshank Grefe 10&#13;
Mariellen Rifenbark Johnson&#13;
L. E. Jones&#13;
Francis A. Kingsbury&#13;
1.6&#13;
Helen Anderson Leopold&#13;
John Payne 10&#13;
Wilson B. Reynolds&#13;
Jeane Runge&#13;
Robert F. Sharp&#13;
Clarence Ver Steeg 7&#13;
Dorothy DeVries Ver Steeg 7&#13;
Louise Madis on Walter&#13;
Dan Wertz&#13;
Ellen White&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
1945&#13;
&#13;
Dua n e T ay lor&#13;
Jan MacCollin Taylor&#13;
E lea nor Bridenba u gh Watson&#13;
Willia m D. W oll e 9&#13;
Rich a rd Youngstrom&#13;
Raly Wallace&#13;
Roy H . Moore&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Ernst Baer 9&#13;
Bonita Hahn Bottolfson&#13;
Evelyn Madsen Held&#13;
&#13;
1946&#13;
David Cox l1&#13;
Loren Gast&#13;
Lois Emm e Green&#13;
6&#13;
Ruth Elliott Jones&#13;
Lyle Knudsen&#13;
Berton A . Kolp&#13;
Robert Haitz Kolp&#13;
don L eopold&#13;
Pearl Manz&#13;
Char les Obye 9&#13;
Payricia Linds a y Parsons&#13;
Robert J. P a r sons&#13;
Coila Si eber 11&#13;
Theodore Whicher&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Schra de r D a y 5&#13;
Robert Eidsmoe&#13;
Robert Fritz 5&#13;
Eda len e Moone McCarthy&#13;
Charles McNutt&#13;
8&#13;
E a rl E. Smith&#13;
Don a ld L. Strandburg 6&#13;
6&#13;
Patricia Pentony Strandburg&#13;
JoAnn Booker Sully&#13;
Doro t h y Sull en ger Whitehou se&#13;
&#13;
Marilyn McDougal Burnham&#13;
Mary Lou Schultz Buse&#13;
Carol yn Wolle Cox 11&#13;
Darlene Held Harris&#13;
Lamar Jones&#13;
Wilfred Kaufman&#13;
W. J. Knupp&#13;
Norm Mathers&#13;
Katherine&#13;
Roadman&#13;
McLaughlin 13&#13;
Richard McLaughlin 13&#13;
Ada Suttie&#13;
Harriet Baker Wood&#13;
&#13;
Stanley E . Anderson 15&#13;
Robert W. Bennett&#13;
Kahtryn Brown Bennett&#13;
Arthur Bona th&#13;
Marion Miller Buckingham&#13;
Charles B. Clayton 12&#13;
Daryle Crabb&#13;
Kay Madison Crabb&#13;
J . L. M. DeGarmo&#13;
Bernard Feikema&#13;
7&#13;
M. L. Granstrom&#13;
Raymond Gusteson&#13;
20&#13;
Jean Lafoon 8&#13;
Mildred Pfeiffer&#13;
18&#13;
Leslie L. Pruehs 12&#13;
George R. Pullman 6&#13;
Alice E. Spalding&#13;
Lucille Mathena Wert&#13;
Geraldine Thomas Whicher&#13;
&#13;
Doro t hy Wells Andrews&#13;
6&#13;
Sally Arthur Bohner&#13;
Mary Louis e H eld Feikema&#13;
Ivan Gosoo&#13;
William C. Mille r&#13;
Fern Dunn Obye 9&#13;
Frances Bridge Schinkel&#13;
Hope Faul Schlenger&#13;
&#13;
Ellen Westergaard&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Robert D. Jackson&#13;
Edward Jacobs&#13;
Warren John son&#13;
Vernice Christiansen&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
16&#13;
Warren Moore&#13;
Lyle A. Rachu y 5&#13;
Harrie t Keith Schlicting&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Marie Wenger Albertson&#13;
Margaret Barks&#13;
7&#13;
Beverly John s on B ooth&#13;
Muriel Lambert Briggs 5&#13;
William E. Briggs 5&#13;
Darlene Taylor Carman&#13;
Claud e Davis 5&#13;
Euni ce Bru ce Duxbury&#13;
Donald Fountain&#13;
Mrs. Henry Glover&#13;
(Lola Graham)&#13;
Harley Gran t ham&#13;
Tom Green 6&#13;
Ruth Brenner Hazen&#13;
Mrs. Darlyne Schwendermann&#13;
Hobson&#13;
Feldman F. Jones 11&#13;
Patricia Foulke Kaufman&#13;
LaVonne Harms Linder 6&#13;
Paul Ralston&#13;
William B. Seibert&#13;
Darwyn&#13;
Snyder&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Edna Trevor Daniels 7&#13;
Merlin C. Davies&#13;
Jack C. F essenden&#13;
Donald E. Fisch e r&#13;
Richard G. Force&#13;
Carol Corrie Fountain&#13;
Clarice Moone Hammerstrom&#13;
Howard Harmon&#13;
Robe rt L. Hazen&#13;
Dale Hi ede man&#13;
Hubert Jerman&#13;
Don K elsey&#13;
Clifford L ewe llyn&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
P . McLaughlin&#13;
Arlon Rader Malcom&#13;
Burton A. Passer 5&#13;
Glen E. Pome roy 8&#13;
Kenneth B. Scott&#13;
Joan Meyer Snyder&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
Iris Mae Lintner Bjork&#13;
Dona ld L. Carver&#13;
June Mousely Carver&#13;
De rrell D. D ow&#13;
Denni s Dow&#13;
All een Lindquist Fraser&#13;
Joan Collin Fri es&#13;
Doroth y Gondrin ge r&#13;
D onald B. Krone&#13;
Josephine Sun Ku&#13;
W. G. Nelson&#13;
Carlton L. Peterson&#13;
Patricia&#13;
McBurney Robinson&#13;
Irwin Sutherland&#13;
Ann H ackney Suthe rla nd&#13;
Dave Wallery&#13;
James L. Whitehouse&#13;
Nancy Cline Youds&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
B. Fra ser&#13;
Ve rlin Heuton&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Irving Jensen&#13;
8&#13;
B en Storek&#13;
F ranklin L . Tepner&#13;
Alice Suzuki Yamada&#13;
&#13;
1955&#13;
&#13;
Loren Anderson&#13;
W esley B oldt&#13;
Mrs. Glenn Bushyager&#13;
7&#13;
Blaine H. Ga rl ow&#13;
Sha r on T a yl or Held&#13;
Dr. Edwin Hirsch (Hon)&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
Curtis G. Love lace&#13;
Esther Little MacFarlane&#13;
Robert B. Mille r&#13;
Donald G. Murray&#13;
Donald W. Pa lme r 8&#13;
Joanne Preul&#13;
Mrs. Hilda Servisson&#13;
Donna Saupe Tarnos ky 5&#13;
&#13;
1956&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Goodwin Cline&#13;
Gordon Dodge&#13;
Donald D. Eilers&#13;
Mary Ann Hoffman&#13;
Cesar Lay&#13;
Kathryn Fristad Rasmus&#13;
&#13;
1957&#13;
&#13;
Hollister Cline&#13;
Karan Gay Davies&#13;
Joanne Hicklin Dierking&#13;
Kenneth Elvick&#13;
Martha Ann Matson Erickson&#13;
Mariltn Menter Garred&#13;
John Groethe&#13;
Beverly Giehm Hall&#13;
Jack Hall&#13;
William Lo&#13;
Dorothy Guyett Lohrman&#13;
Richard Metcalf&#13;
Patricia&#13;
Moorhead&#13;
Tiemans&#13;
Robert K. Tiemans&#13;
&#13;
1958&#13;
&#13;
Everett C. Ball&#13;
Kenneth Beenken&#13;
David H . Bogue 5&#13;
Delos Corderman&#13;
Paul Di erking&#13;
Charles F. Ellison&#13;
Sandra Maddison Hawk&#13;
Virgil Ma uer&#13;
Mrs. Virgil Mauer&#13;
Dixie Kirkhart Metcalf&#13;
Darlene Froelich Miller&#13;
Marjorie Rowla,nds Peterson&#13;
Roy Peterson&#13;
Joyce Elaine Arnold Sievers&#13;
Thomas Tooey&#13;
Alvin Trucano&#13;
&#13;
1959&#13;
&#13;
Allan Biesemeyer&#13;
Connie Davies Biesemeyer&#13;
Mervyn Cowling&#13;
Gordon W. Fountain&#13;
Esme Franzen&#13;
Karen Han se n&#13;
Janice&#13;
Elze Hass&#13;
Roger L eroy Hass&#13;
Jane Arnold Heikens&#13;
Stanley Heikens&#13;
Karen Kay Johnson Hyde&#13;
Cha rlotte A. Johnson&#13;
Maxine Law&#13;
Anita Kalskett Moorhead&#13;
Don Veghlan&#13;
Nancy Crary Veghlan&#13;
G lenna Wardlowe&#13;
Mrs. John Weisensee&#13;
Natalie Whitnev&#13;
&#13;
1960&#13;
&#13;
Leone Berkenpas Eidsmoe&#13;
Mrs. J. A. Hilts&#13;
Katherine Marjorwicz&#13;
Leverenz&#13;
Robert Leverenz&#13;
Harold Poppen&#13;
Gladys V. Powers&#13;
William B. Ridout&#13;
K e it h Rundell&#13;
.J oa nne Schne ll&#13;
W. Wa llace Spiegel&#13;
Sand ra P a trick Cope&#13;
Mrs. Elmer&#13;
&#13;
36&#13;
&#13;
1961&#13;
&#13;
Mack lin&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Mary E. Rice&#13;
Lamar Cope&#13;
June Class of 1961&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Wedgwood&#13;
Nellie Carpenter Winter&#13;
Lydia Bixby Young&#13;
&#13;
Carol&#13;
&#13;
Alice Bushnell Down&#13;
Vera Hatfield Gerkin&#13;
Cornelia Lueder Johnson&#13;
G. S. Nichols&#13;
Minnie C. Oates&#13;
Ernest M. Raun&#13;
Leroy Rowse&#13;
&#13;
1962&#13;
&#13;
Higgins Ridout&#13;
&#13;
CONTRIBUTIONS OTHER&#13;
THAN LIVING ENDOWMENT&#13;
&#13;
1903&#13;
&#13;
Daniel Starch&#13;
&#13;
1905&#13;
&#13;
Luella Marquardt&#13;
&#13;
1906&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude&#13;
Crossan Kindig&#13;
Heiman Van Dyke&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
&#13;
Ella Dickson Blackshire&#13;
Mabel Vesta Towner&#13;
&#13;
1908&#13;
&#13;
Lura Matteson Anderson&#13;
Thomas C. Anderson&#13;
A. G. Cushma n&#13;
Florence&#13;
Clark Heilman&#13;
Frank Heilman&#13;
Ethel Haskins Mahoney&#13;
D eLoss P . Shull&#13;
&#13;
1911&#13;
&#13;
Edna E. Randolph&#13;
Cora McKellip Sharman&#13;
Maria Wiese&#13;
&#13;
1912&#13;
&#13;
D. P . Mahoney&#13;
&#13;
1913&#13;
&#13;
Harry A. Chipman&#13;
Eva L eazer Potter&#13;
George W. Prichard&#13;
John Ralston&#13;
Lura Stonebraker&#13;
Helen Wedgwood&#13;
Cora Hayden Winterringer&#13;
Henry Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
1914&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Morgan Coombs&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
Charles Berkstresser&#13;
Mabel Irwin Burgess&#13;
Carl W. Sass&#13;
Ertel Stonebraker&#13;
Cyril Upham&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
F. Earl Burgess&#13;
Lois M. Cr o uch&#13;
Mary Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
Corne lia McBurney French&#13;
Ray Harrington&#13;
Marie Sebern Kolp&#13;
Minnie F rv McBride&#13;
Neva Hauk Ralston&#13;
Fern Beachem Reynolds&#13;
&#13;
1918&#13;
&#13;
G . E. Barks&#13;
Bernard B r own&#13;
Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
Mar tha Christ&#13;
&#13;
1921&#13;
&#13;
Arthur J. Coombs&#13;
Howard Down&#13;
Virgil Gerkin&#13;
Ethel Thompson&#13;
Kucinski&#13;
Harry E. Whyte&#13;
Ida Willcutt Wilson&#13;
Ron Wilson&#13;
&#13;
1922&#13;
Ira Gw inn&#13;
Leon E . Hickman&#13;
A. Q. Johnson&#13;
Sherman&#13;
McKinley, Jr.&#13;
Don Nissen&#13;
&#13;
1923&#13;
&#13;
1924&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Haradon Eerkes&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Ruth Berner Hauff&#13;
Mayme Hoyt Hickman&#13;
Ray Olson&#13;
George Paradise&#13;
Josephine Steele Pecant&#13;
Russell B. Pecaut&#13;
Muriel D eWitt Rowse&#13;
&#13;
1925&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite H eld Benz&#13;
Lester Benz&#13;
Viola Benz&#13;
Kenneth Funkhouser&#13;
Hazel Lowry Funkhouser&#13;
Emily Linden&#13;
Bernice Trindle McCoy&#13;
Elaine Barnt Rogers&#13;
Fred Share&#13;
&#13;
1926&#13;
&#13;
Ione Lease&#13;
Margaret&#13;
Spencer Rogers&#13;
Ruth Gilbert Burnett&#13;
&#13;
1927&#13;
&#13;
Paul Beck&#13;
Milo Bergeson&#13;
Merrill B urnett&#13;
J. C. Ducommun&#13;
Robert Hol comb&#13;
Mabel Hoyt&#13;
Lois Little&#13;
Margare t McCoy&#13;
Ray Rodeen&#13;
N . E. Williams&#13;
&#13;
1928&#13;
&#13;
Ru t h Gauger Furrow&#13;
Dwight Hauff&#13;
Julia La Grone&#13;
C. C. Maddison&#13;
&#13;
1929&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Su rbe r Croston&#13;
Ruth Frum&#13;
Ela Reime rs Wallace&#13;
Thelma Whitford&#13;
Kris tine Kucins ki Whitney&#13;
Margaret&#13;
Chesterman&#13;
Overgaard&#13;
&#13;
1930&#13;
&#13;
Gordon Crary&#13;
Lowell Crippen&#13;
Louis Croston&#13;
William B. Danforth&#13;
Dean Gree n&#13;
Lucille Claerbout&#13;
McGregor&#13;
Eleanor Sterling Robertson&#13;
&#13;
1931&#13;
&#13;
Gen evieve Metcalf&#13;
Nora Kru se&#13;
Wayne Menter&#13;
Edward H . Sibl ey&#13;
&#13;
1932&#13;
&#13;
Danforth&#13;
&#13;
David C. Carver&#13;
Grace Gordon Hatt&#13;
Har vey Nelson&#13;
Harvey&#13;
Pottoff&#13;
Home r Sch aper&#13;
Margaret Propp Thompson&#13;
&#13;
1933&#13;
&#13;
Walter Britten&#13;
William Drommer&#13;
&#13;
Clara Bergman&#13;
&#13;
1934&#13;
&#13;
Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Adel ine Hall Anderle&#13;
Harold Decker&#13;
Helene Crenshaw Decker&#13;
John E. Griffen&#13;
Audrey Stromberg Kolbe&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Brown&#13;
Dorothy Sorenson Clark&#13;
Miles Tommeraasen&#13;
&#13;
1944&#13;
&#13;
1935&#13;
&#13;
Harold Bomgaars&#13;
Mary Louie Held&#13;
Robert L. Frakes&#13;
Fern Dunn Obye&#13;
&#13;
1936&#13;
&#13;
Lois McCallum Hopkins&#13;
Edward Jacobs&#13;
&#13;
1937&#13;
&#13;
Audrey Hugh es Goodrich&#13;
Guy Nettleton&#13;
Charles Obye&#13;
Maynard Porter&#13;
Coila Sieber&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Hopkinson Drommer&#13;
F . Merlin Kolbe&#13;
0. B . Keiser&#13;
Leo Kucinski&#13;
Charles Littlejohn&#13;
Everett Timm&#13;
Harrison Dawes&#13;
Victor J acobson&#13;
Parnell H. Mahoney&#13;
&#13;
1938&#13;
&#13;
Vera Hayes Campbell&#13;
Kenneth Little John&#13;
Margaret Lease&#13;
Edgar McCracken&#13;
Ke n neth E. Metcalf&#13;
Walter Olsen&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy E . Arnold&#13;
Evelyn DePue McClure&#13;
H elen P earson McCracken&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
Anne Larsen Olsen&#13;
Paul G. Sloan&#13;
Margaret Jeane Anderson Timm&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
Keith Arnold&#13;
S. Willard Cunningham&#13;
Fred Davenport&#13;
Duane R Halford&#13;
Miriam Hartley&#13;
Richard V. King&#13;
Lillian Pickersg.ill&#13;
Robert Rae&#13;
Gen e vie ve Whittington S loa n&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Betty Bootjer Butler&#13;
Bernard Feikema&#13;
Don Severeide&#13;
&#13;
1943&#13;
Francis L. Brockman&#13;
&#13;
Feikema&#13;
&#13;
1945&#13;
1946&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
Elbert N. Bales&#13;
Orin K . Goodrich, Jr.&#13;
B ethel Forsling Nettleton&#13;
Sterling Stewart&#13;
&#13;
1948&#13;
&#13;
Mu riel Lambert Briggs&#13;
William E. Briggs&#13;
Francis Wadedo&#13;
&#13;
1949&#13;
&#13;
Dor othy Zimmerman Corkhill&#13;
Lyle Couture&#13;
ClariceMoone Hammerstrom&#13;
Shirley Booz Harirngton&#13;
Don Lawrenson&#13;
Robert Melloy&#13;
E l eanor Everett Tasker&#13;
Wm. Yockey&#13;
Richard Youngstrom&#13;
&#13;
1950&#13;
&#13;
Ina Mae Ham Courture&#13;
Dean Harrington&#13;
Charles Q . Wallace&#13;
Ann Madison Wallace&#13;
&#13;
1951&#13;
&#13;
Chet Joslin&#13;
Allen Tasker&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
&#13;
Vesta Sma ll Billings&#13;
Margine Schnell&#13;
Mrs. H. P. Shedd&#13;
Dick Throne&#13;
&#13;
1953&#13;
&#13;
James Hamilton Fowler&#13;
Joanne Hammerstrom Fowler&#13;
H . Wayne Johnson&#13;
Robert L. Phelps&#13;
Phyllis Runge&#13;
Ruth Wilson&#13;
&#13;
1954&#13;
&#13;
Bob Beck&#13;
.James Galli&#13;
Stan Griegg&#13;
M rs . Irving Jensen&#13;
&#13;
1955&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Glenn Bushyager&#13;
Dwaine F. Miller&#13;
Robert B. Miller&#13;
Donald Palmer&#13;
&#13;
1956&#13;
&#13;
Harold Corkhill&#13;
Frances Voss Harris&#13;
Georgia Hix Klay&#13;
Russell Klay&#13;
Jack Pommrehn&#13;
&#13;
1957&#13;
&#13;
Leo Harris&#13;
Mildred Nemecheck Moseman&#13;
&#13;
1958&#13;
&#13;
Vir ginia Bray&#13;
Sandra Maddison Hawk&#13;
Donna Haafke Johnson&#13;
Thomas&#13;
Johnsrud&#13;
J. Porter Kaplan&#13;
Darlene Froelich Miller&#13;
Robert R. Reynders&#13;
Carle ne Erickson Throne&#13;
&#13;
1959&#13;
&#13;
Jim Erwin&#13;
N ita Harris Edl und&#13;
DeWitt Killam&#13;
Anita Kalskett Moorhead&#13;
Nadine Dirks Phillips&#13;
Sam Philli ps&#13;
Thomas Watt&#13;
&#13;
1960&#13;
&#13;
Robert Dannenberg&#13;
Phyllis&#13;
Mackintosh&#13;
Killam&#13;
Helen An glum Shontz&#13;
&#13;
1961&#13;
&#13;
H . A. Palmer, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Why not send&#13;
&#13;
YOUR&#13;
&#13;
CONTRIBUTION&#13;
to the 1961-62 L. E. FUND&#13;
&#13;
NOW?&#13;
Simply address to Living Endowment, Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI REPRESENT&#13;
COLLEGE AT INAUGRALS&#13;
The alumni as listed below, represented&#13;
Morningside College at various inaugrals&#13;
of college presidents throughout the country.&#13;
Reverend '21 and Mrs. Ralph Long at&#13;
the inaugral of Thomas Asa Collins as&#13;
President of North Carolina Wesleyan College in Rocky Mount, North Carolina on&#13;
October 25th.&#13;
Wilson B. '43 and Mrs. Reynolds at the&#13;
inaugral of President J. Copeland as President of Maryville College, Maryville, Tennessee on October 28th.&#13;
Miss Margaret Kidder '23 at the inaugral&#13;
of Leland E. Traywick as president of&#13;
Southwest Missouri State College, Springfield, Missouri on November 14th.&#13;
Mr. Myron Huls·e '37 and Mrs. Hulse at&#13;
the inaugral of the very Reverend Edward&#13;
J. Burke as president of St. John's University, Jamaica, New York on November 1.&#13;
Mr. Myron Hulse '37 and Mrs. Hulse at&#13;
the inaugral of Author Ole Davidson as&#13;
president of Wagner College on Staten&#13;
Island, November 12th.&#13;
Roland W elch '37 and Mrs. Welch of&#13;
Kearney, Nebraska, at the inaugral of Milton J. Hassel as president of Nebraska&#13;
State Teachers College at Kearney on November 15th.&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Hopkins (Lois McCallum&#13;
'48) of New Wilmington, Pennsylvania, at&#13;
the inaugral of Chauncey Goodrich Bey as&#13;
president of Thiel College in Greenville,&#13;
Pennsylvania.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDER WORKING&#13;
ON MOON CRAFT&#13;
Wendell B. Seward '31, after fifteen&#13;
years with NBC-TV, left to enter a newer&#13;
field of space electronics. H e spent two&#13;
years at Bendix Pacific designing transistorized units for ground tracking stations of Project Mercury and moved to&#13;
Hughes Aircraft company in Culver City&#13;
in June to join a surveyor group which is&#13;
producing a TV equipped space craft to be&#13;
soft landed on the moon.&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
"GRANDMA" OF THE NURSERY&#13;
Mrs. E. C. Potter 'Eva Leazer '13" at 74&#13;
is still on the Hospital staff in Roswell,&#13;
New Mexico as nursery Relief nurse or a&#13;
licensed practical nurse. This position&#13;
allows her time to visit daughters in Phoenix and Denver frequently and still do her&#13;
work of taking care of the "newborns".&#13;
Mrs. Potter loves her work and says of&#13;
it, "It is very pleasant and always interesting, and I love it even though it is a&#13;
very responsibile task. Babies are always&#13;
a miracle to me - every new one that&#13;
comes into the nursery is a wonderful piece&#13;
of God's handwork and I still marvel at it."&#13;
"Mom" to some of the doctors and&#13;
"Grandma of the Nursery," Mrs. Potter&#13;
makes her home with a daughter in Roswell,&#13;
the daughter who was born in South&#13;
America when Mrs. Potter was in missionary work at Huancaya, Peru.&#13;
&#13;
REV. JACK D. EALES&#13;
TO NEW YORK CHURCH&#13;
Rev. Jack D. Eales '57, vicar for the last&#13;
three and a half years of Trinity church at&#13;
Denison, Iowa, and Trinity Memorial&#13;
Church at Mapleton, Iowa, has accepted a&#13;
call to become rector of Calvary Episcopal&#13;
church in Utica, N. Y. During his tenure&#13;
at Denison, his church there was completely&#13;
renovated, a new rectory purchased and a&#13;
substantial increase in church and sunday&#13;
school membership and budget recorded.&#13;
Rev. Eales was active in community affairs at Denison. He was vice president of&#13;
the Crawford&#13;
County Tuberculosis and&#13;
Health Association, on the board of directors of the Denison Community Chest, for&#13;
which he was this year's drive chairman,&#13;
t aught the National Chamber of Commerce's Action Course in Practical Politics,&#13;
has been a member of the Episcopal diocese&#13;
of Iowa's department of Christian social&#13;
relations and was appointed by Gov. Her schel Loveless as an original member of&#13;
the Iowa Commission on alcoholism.&#13;
His new church is in downtown Utica&#13;
and will celebrate its 100th birthday anniversary in 1970. It is a 622 communicant&#13;
parish.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. M. L. Peterson ('07)&#13;
Mitchell) of Dolliver, Iowa.&#13;
Ralph Eugene Root, 1905 graduate of&#13;
Morningside died in Franklin, N. H., following a brief illness. Funeral services&#13;
were held in Annapolis.&#13;
Professor Root was an instructor in&#13;
mathematics at SUI from 1906 to 1910. He&#13;
had been a professor emeritus of the U. S.&#13;
Naval Postgraduate School since his retirement in 1946 from a post as senior professor and head of the department of&#13;
mathematics and mechanics.&#13;
After teaching at SUI and the University&#13;
of Missouri, Professor Root accepted a post&#13;
in 1913 in the U. S. Naval Academy in&#13;
Annapolis and began his 33-year career of&#13;
training officers in the basic fields of&#13;
mathematics and its applications. He became the first full-time professor in the&#13;
U. S. Naval Post-graduate School and&#13;
played a major role in its dev·e lopment and&#13;
in the advanced training of naval officers.&#13;
When the school was moved to Monterey,&#13;
California, the new building housing the&#13;
library&#13;
and the department of mathematics and mechanics was named Root Hall&#13;
in his honor. Professor and Mrs. Root&#13;
attended the formal dedication of the building in 191&#13;
58.&#13;
Professor Root received an honorary&#13;
Sc. D degree from Morningside College. He&#13;
received an MS dgr from SUI and a Ph. D.&#13;
degree from the University of Chicago. He&#13;
taught at Forest City High School in 19051906.&#13;
Born in Grundy County, Mo., July 19,&#13;
1876, Professor Root was married in 1904&#13;
to Mary K. Batcheller, who survives him.&#13;
Also surviving are four children; Mrs.&#13;
Ralph G. Meader, Bethesda, Md:&#13;
Capt.&#13;
Lloyd E. Root, C. E. C., US. Navy, Great&#13;
Lak·e s, Ill: Mrs. John B. Tuttle, Pelham&#13;
Manor, N. Y.; and Mrs. Ellis P. Root,&#13;
Lutherville, Md.&#13;
Professor Root was&#13;
Society of the Sigma&#13;
Mathematical Society,&#13;
Association of America&#13;
Society for Engineering&#13;
&#13;
a member of the&#13;
Xi, the American&#13;
the Mathematical&#13;
and the American&#13;
Education.&#13;
&#13;
(Lottie E.&#13;
&#13;
Carroll R. Northup '20, died November&#13;
16th in Sioux City after a four month illness.&#13;
&#13;
"Norty" as he was known to his contemporaries and fans, was a star athlete at&#13;
Morningside. He was named all-opponent&#13;
end by Notre Dame in 1917. He earned&#13;
seven football letters, four with the varsity&#13;
and three with the academy. He was president of the student body in 1920.&#13;
From the Sioux City Journal of Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 19. "He coaches all sports at Missouri Valley, Iowa for two years and he&#13;
was line coach at Morningside for a year&#13;
after his graduation.&#13;
"Mr. Northup was a pitcher and outfield&#13;
and played semi-professional baseball for&#13;
numerous teams in Iowa and South Dakota&#13;
and in other sections in the midwest".&#13;
At the annual "M" Club luncheon at&#13;
Homecoming time three years ago, "Norty"&#13;
was awarded an "M" Club blanket in recognition of his support for and enthusiasm&#13;
in athletics.&#13;
Again quoting the Sioux City Journal "Sporting enthusiasts termed him one of&#13;
the all time greats at Morningside College".&#13;
He is survived by Mrs. Northup and a&#13;
daughter Helen. Helen graduated from&#13;
Morningside in 1946. They live at 2219&#13;
Douglas Street in Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. A . Greenfield (Mollie Krieger '23)&#13;
of Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
Mrs. E. G. Lovelace (Daisy English) '15&#13;
of El Paso, Texas passed away in December 1960.&#13;
Dr. John Kellogg '04 of 2601 Circle Drive&#13;
in St. Louis died August 10th after a long&#13;
illness.&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Ruth Erdeen Bailey Willcutt ('31)&#13;
died October 2, 1961.&#13;
Mrs. Willcutt lived&#13;
at 8 Mishawaka Drive in Keokuk, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Clare D. Schaap '25 died on October&#13;
14, 1961. His home was in Algona, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Grace Mae Currier, graduate of the&#13;
academy and former student in the Class&#13;
of 1909 di·ed September 7th in California.&#13;
Miss Currier, a retired school teacher&#13;
and social worker, graduated from Northwestern University. She had taught school&#13;
in Illinois and was a supervisor of an&#13;
orphanage in Grenoble, France, for world&#13;
War I. Orphans. She received her masters&#13;
degree from Columbia University, had&#13;
studied at Berlin Unversity and during&#13;
World War II helped a Jewish family&#13;
escape from Berlin to Canada.&#13;
She had lived in California since 1926&#13;
and had done social work at the Techachapi&#13;
Women's prison and later served as dietician at an orphanage in Oakland. Her&#13;
last job before retirement was as superintendent of the retired teachers home in&#13;
Pasadena.&#13;
Bernice L. Bowman '14 (Mrs. Don A .&#13;
Jenkins) died very suddenly at Tucson,&#13;
Arizona on November 14th. Funeral services were held in Minneapolis and burial&#13;
in Fort Snelling National Cemetery. She&#13;
is survived by her husband, Don A. Jenkins,&#13;
a daughter, Mrs. Omer Seim of Deephaven,&#13;
Minnesota, a son, Rodney A. Jenkins of&#13;
Minneapolis, seven grandchildren and a&#13;
brother, Russell E. Bowman, of Miami,&#13;
Florida. She was graduated from Ida Grove&#13;
High School and Morningside College and&#13;
taught in the schools of Eagle Grove,&#13;
Onawa and Sanborn, Iowa. She took graduate work at the University of Chicago.&#13;
In 1921 she married Don A. Jenkins of&#13;
Minneapolis and made her home there&#13;
teaching for several years in the Minneapolis schools. For the past five years they&#13;
had spent the summers in their summer&#13;
home on Woman Lake in northern Minnesota and winters in Tucson, Arizona.&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
Morningside "T" Shirts went to these&#13;
&#13;
"WEE MORNINGSIDERS"&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Richard V. King . .41 of Cha dd's&#13;
Ford, Pennsylvania a daughter born on August&#13;
30th. Rebecca Jeanne Kin g.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Tom Davies (Carolyn Held '51),&#13;
a son, Duane Thomas, born September 18, 1961.&#13;
Their h ome is Princeton, Oregon.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ray Gustavson '49, a son, Mark&#13;
Alan, born March 28, 1961. Their h ome is 325&#13;
W. 27th St., Sio ux City, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. James F. Martens. '61 (Kea&#13;
Heesch '60) a daughter,&#13;
Catherine Louise, born&#13;
August 22, 1961 Their&#13;
home is 2319 South 15th,&#13;
St. J oseph, Mo.&#13;
To Mrs. Cor rine Rickson&#13;
(Co rrine R. Cooley&#13;
Julie Ann. born July 22, 1961.&#13;
'45) a daughter,&#13;
The Ricksons live at 11706 Pierce St., Omaha&#13;
44, Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. C. W. Cropley '49, a son, Stuart&#13;
Edward, born September 14, 1961. The Cropleys&#13;
live at 1075 All en Ave., Garner, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. David Chapman '60, a son, Dean&#13;
Scott, born July 8, 1961.. The Chapman s live&#13;
at 1106 1/2 Bahn son, S ioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. John Sprugel (Lovice M. Kingsbury '47) a girl, Lynne Marie, born July 29 ,&#13;
The Sprugels live at 204 8th Ave, S ibley, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Blaine D. Beane '59 , a da u ghter.&#13;
Deborah Ann , born August 7.. Their&#13;
address is&#13;
3715 Jones, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gera ld Stein '56, a son Michael&#13;
Phillip born Sept. 25, 1961.&#13;
Their address is&#13;
6236 Stanl ey Ave., San Diego 15, Californ ia .&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert H. Bates '53, a girl.&#13;
Stephan ia Anne, born Nov. 1. 1960. The Bates&#13;
lives at 3717 Ingalls Ave, Alexandria, Va.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. G. Robert Carlson '60 (Deanna&#13;
Stiegelmeyer .. 60) a boy, Jay Robert, born Sept.&#13;
17, 1961. . They live at 209 Denver St. , Apt. 5 ,&#13;
Brighton, Colorado.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Don Shelton '49 (Betty Fletcher&#13;
'50) a girl, Sally Lyn . born May 2, 1961. They&#13;
live at 804 W. Hazel, Decatur, Ill.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Earle E. Custer '53, a boy,&#13;
Michael Paul. born on Oct. 9th. The Custers&#13;
live at 2 Bourne Ave. , Hebronville, Mass.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Marlo June '59 (Janice Thompson) a gir l, Karen Marie, born August 7. the&#13;
Junes live at 6621 Minnetonka Blvd., Minneapoli s&#13;
26. Minn.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roger B Parsons ('54) , twins,&#13;
Russell &amp; Sh aron, born Jan 18, 19Gl. The Parsons li ve at 6268 Belhave n, Riverside, Californi a .&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Marvin B. Messenger (Marjorie&#13;
Friedrichs '61) a son, Monte Mitchell , born&#13;
August 26. 1961. T hey live at 3526 Mt. Vernon,&#13;
Fort Worth, Texas.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dick Pruehs (Luanne Gr egalunas .. 62) a son, born Sept. 1. Th ey live at&#13;
4711 S. Lakeport Rd ., Sio ux City . Iowa .&#13;
To Mr &amp; Mrs. J ack A. Hall '57 (Beverly G iehm&#13;
'57) a son, Gregory Scott, born Oct. 8th. They&#13;
live at 1005 14th St., Eldora, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alex Pelelo, '51 , a daughter&#13;
born October 9, 1961. They live at Merrill, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Howard Palmer '61, a daughter&#13;
born Sept. 23, 1961. They live at 310 S. Fairmount St., Siou x City, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gene (Dow) Dymkows ki '60, a&#13;
daughter&#13;
Jeane, born in June.&#13;
They live at&#13;
Charl otte, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Delaine B. Koch '58 (Judy Dirks&#13;
'61) a girl, Karen born Nov. 14, 1961. They live&#13;
in Akron, I owa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Karl Kletschke&#13;
&#13;
'51, 3513 Virginia St. , Sioux City, twin daughters&#13;
born Nov.&#13;
12, 1961.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Art Barrett, Jr. '54 , of Omaha,&#13;
a daughter.&#13;
&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. James Goff '51, 3725 Ridge&#13;
Ave., Sioux City ; a daughter&#13;
born Jan. 3, 1962.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Kenneth Zeising '55, 1116 28th&#13;
St., Sioux City, a son born January&#13;
4 1962.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Kermit Fountain '58, Sloan ,&#13;
Iowa. a son bo rn October 24 . 1961.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Hube r t McClary (Violet Baker&#13;
'54) . a daughter&#13;
born October 26, 1961.&#13;
The&#13;
McClary's h ave two other sons, Gregg and Perry&#13;
and a daughter Brenda. Their address is R. R.&#13;
2, Wayne, Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Meyer Shragg '52, a daughter&#13;
born, Jamieson Mindelle, on De cember 5, 1961.&#13;
The Shraggs live a t 10813 First Avenue, Whittie r .&#13;
California .&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roger Hass '59, a daughter&#13;
born, Carol Joy, on December 18, 1961.&#13;
The&#13;
Hass family lives at 5026 Sunset Drive Ralston,&#13;
Nebraska.&#13;
&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. K e ith C. Rundell '60, a son&#13;
born, Cla rk Eugene, on Oc t. 20, 1961. The Rundells live at 10609 Fowler Ave .. Omah a 34. Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Clifford D . Hansen '54 (Janet&#13;
Durlin '53) a girl, Lori Ann. born Sept. 21, 1961.&#13;
They live at 2016 W. 19th, S ioux City, Iowa.&#13;
The Hansens have two other childre n Kirk&#13;
and Lisa.&#13;
Rev. &amp; Mrs. Eldon Jandebeur&#13;
(x57 E11en Huster) have adopted a girl, Beth Ann , b orn August&#13;
16th., 1961.. The Jandebeurslive at 909 16th,&#13;
Aurora. Nebr.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. J. 0. Harvey '57 , a girl, Vi cki&#13;
Lynn born Sept. 8, 1961. they also have a boy&#13;
Howard The Harveyslive at 1279 E. M inneh a ha&#13;
Ave., St. Paul 6, M inn.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert J. Lars on '56 (Marlys&#13;
Kinnan '58) twin daughters&#13;
Meredith&#13;
Sue and&#13;
Marian Kae, born March 3, 1961. the Larsons&#13;
live at 1117 Jennings,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alan Southern (Betty Sarch et&#13;
'48) on Oct. 13th, a daughter,&#13;
L o ri Renee. The&#13;
Southerns live at 4615 Aurora Ave. No., Seattle,&#13;
Washington.&#13;
To Donna Peterson Esmay 61 and James Esmay&#13;
'60, on October 29, a s on , David James.&#13;
The&#13;
Esmays live a t 906 N. Guignard Drive, Sumter,&#13;
N. Carolina.&#13;
To Myrtle Geake Stephens '48 and K enneth R .&#13;
('50), a son, Graig Holloway, bo rn&#13;
Stephens&#13;
August 9 t h. The Stephens h a ve two other children, Gwendolyn 9 and William 8 . Their&#13;
address is 512 Burton St., Storm Lake, Iowa.&#13;
To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Donald Johns (Carol Hatch&#13;
. . 51) a son , Michael Scot on July&#13;
8, 196·1 .&#13;
Michael h as two sisters,&#13;
Marsh 10 Barbara 7,&#13;
and a brother Paul 4 1/2. The Johns' live at&#13;
Route l, Pierson, Iowa.&#13;
To Virgil and Doris May Mauer (bot h '58 ) a&#13;
The Mauers&#13;
s on, Steven, on Sept. 20, 1961.&#13;
have a n other s on - aged 3. They live at 1696&#13;
Wisconsin i n D ubuque.&#13;
To Paul '48 and Mar t h a Ralston, a daughter.&#13;
The Rals ton s live at 1120 25th St.. Marion , Iowa.&#13;
To Jerome&#13;
Goldis '61 a nd Mrs. Goldis, a daugh ter, Maryl Faye on November 4th, 1961.&#13;
The&#13;
Goldis live at 10915 A. Lochmond Circle, Dallas&#13;
18, Texas.&#13;
To William D. a nd Elaine (Johnson) Bowman&#13;
('50) a daughter, Beverly Ann on Novembe r 24th.&#13;
Be verl y Ann h as a brother Re id William, 16&#13;
months old.&#13;
T h e Bowmans li ve at 505 Elm&#13;
Street in Coon Rapids , Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
WEDDINGS&#13;
Donald W. Palmer '55 to Sandra R.&#13;
Sanders in Grace Methodist Church in&#13;
Waterloo, Iowa. Their address is 119 1/2&#13;
Allen St., Waterloo, Iowa.&#13;
Mareida Joy Scheidt ('64) to Carl Martin&#13;
at the Good Sheperd Lutheran Church in&#13;
&#13;
Reno, Nevada. Their address is 2225 Harrison St., Apt. 205 in Oakland, California.&#13;
Vesta Feller Cosgrove '48 to Louis R.&#13;
Pryor.&#13;
Rev. John Ervin Feller '21 of&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa, father of the bride, performed the ceremony in the chapel of the&#13;
First Methodist Church in Colorado Springs.&#13;
Mrs. Pryor's family includes her 7 1/2&#13;
year&#13;
old son, John Erwin.&#13;
They live at 503&#13;
McKee Drive in Gallup, New Mexico. Mrs.&#13;
Proyer teaches English and speech at the&#13;
Gallup high school.&#13;
Edythe Albert '41 to Eugene F . Cawood,&#13;
June 15, 1960. Mr. Cawood is Regional&#13;
Life Manager of the State Farm Insurance&#13;
Company. Mrs. Cawood was in the Music&#13;
Education department at the University of&#13;
Michigan. They live at 209 Forest Hill&#13;
Dr., West Lafayette, Indiana.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS NOTES&#13;
1905&#13;
Emma F 'a ir Young '05 of 438 Empress&#13;
A venue, in Encino stated in a recent letter, "I am happy to report that my family&#13;
and I are all in good health. We do have&#13;
fires and earthquakes, and maybe floods&#13;
but still we survive and enjoy California."&#13;
1907&#13;
Mr. P. E. DeGriselles ('07) now 82, lives&#13;
at Worthington, Minnesota. He mentioned&#13;
in a note that his history is about finished.&#13;
The DeGriselles had a family of four boys&#13;
and four girls. They now have 2 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. Mrs.&#13;
DeGrisselles is confined to a wheelchair&#13;
and Mr. DeGrisselles cares for her, besides&#13;
working on the lawn, gardening, shoveling&#13;
snow and participating in community activities. He lives at 212 West Okabena in&#13;
Worthington.&#13;
1909&#13;
Ed M. Brown '0,9, (supposedly retired) is&#13;
busy promoting activity and attendance at&#13;
a Monthly Coffee Club (A De Land,&#13;
Florida, Chamber of Commerce activity).&#13;
He also is promoter of a Membership club&#13;
meeting monthly. In addition to all this&#13;
h e is investigating the advisability of organizing a United Fund in DeLand and&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
other. nearby communities, in a joint operation.&#13;
The Browns (Mrs. Brown is Ida Ullman&#13;
'09) live at De Leon Springs, Florida, Box&#13;
55.&#13;
1912&#13;
Ethel Shannon '12 will be retiring this&#13;
year after having taught 50 years. Much&#13;
of Miss Shannon's teaching was in the&#13;
Fort Dodge Public School system. She lives&#13;
at 214 N. 16th St. in Fort Dodge, Iowa.&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Gehring '12 (Rosa Dodge),&#13;
Charles City College, is librarian of the&#13;
Howard Public Library at Howard, South&#13;
Dakota.&#13;
1916&#13;
M. Louis Crouch '16 has retired from the&#13;
position of Head Librarian in the State&#13;
Teachers College in Wayne, Nebraska and&#13;
now lives at 1706 Morningside Ave., Apt.&#13;
H., in Sioux City.&#13;
1918&#13;
Alice Miller Lindhorst '18, whose husband&#13;
Dr. Frank A. Lindhorst is Chairman of the&#13;
Department of Bible and Religious Education at the University of Pacific, in Stocton, California, keeps herself busy with&#13;
home, church, and university activities. She&#13;
acts as a reader for several of the Bible&#13;
teachers at the university. Her address is&#13;
242 E. Churchill, Stocton 4, California.&#13;
&#13;
edition of Who's Who of American Women&#13;
issued in 1961. Miss Vickers is head&#13;
librarian of Fracker Library at Buena Vista&#13;
College in Storm Lake, Iowa. She will soon&#13;
be involved in the planning of a new library&#13;
building in that campus.&#13;
&#13;
1919&#13;
Helen Meeks Hindman '19 and Mr. Hindman enjoyed a family reunion this summer&#13;
with four of their five children and the&#13;
grandchildren. A new grandson, Charles&#13;
Michael Simet came along on October 7th .&#13;
- too late for the reunion.&#13;
&#13;
1928&#13;
Margaret Miller '28 is teaching American&#13;
and English Literature and American History in Huron Senior High School. She&#13;
states that she will probably keep at it&#13;
until she retires because she really loves&#13;
to teach.&#13;
1931&#13;
H. Milo Hall "31 is presently serving as&#13;
the pastor of the Plover-Havelock charges&#13;
in the North Iowa Conference of the Methodist Church. He was formerly at Riverside&#13;
Methodist Church in Fort Dodge.&#13;
1932&#13;
Mrs. Norma C. Schumann '32 of 9219 N .&#13;
Clarendon Ave., In Portland, Oregon is with&#13;
the U. S. National Bank there. Her husband lost his life in an automobile accident&#13;
in November. She plays the organ and has&#13;
been doing relief work during the summer&#13;
at the Methodist Church near her home.&#13;
&#13;
1922&#13;
Wesley F. Gehring '22 has purchased and&#13;
is operating the Gehring Insurance Agency&#13;
formerly owned by E. W. Gehring, now&#13;
deceased.&#13;
1923&#13;
Leroy Rowse '23 was again an instructor&#13;
this summer in the National Science Foundation Institute at George Peabody College&#13;
for Teachers in Nashville, Tenn. He taught&#13;
Physics and Earth Science. Leroy teaches&#13;
physics at Central high school in Sioux&#13;
City.&#13;
Lucille Vickers '23 is listed in the second&#13;
&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
1924&#13;
Muriel DeWitt Rowse '24 received a&#13;
Masters of Arts degre·e from George Peabody College for Teachers at commencement exercises August 18th.&#13;
Muriel DeWitt Rowse '24 received her&#13;
masters degree from George Peabody College just 37 years after receiving her BA&#13;
at Morningside. Muriel teaches 5th grade&#13;
at Smith .&#13;
Paul C. Ellis '24 is in his 33rd year as&#13;
a Methodist Minister. He is in his 7th year&#13;
in Villisca in the South Iowa Conference.&#13;
&#13;
1927&#13;
Joseph T. Ott '27 is advertising director&#13;
for the Boreman Company in Des Moines,&#13;
publishers of the Merchants Trade Journal.&#13;
He joined the firm last September 15, after&#13;
being associated with Better Homes and&#13;
Gardens. Joe maintains an office at 183&#13;
Madison Avenue in New York and lives on&#13;
Parish Lane in Darien, Connecticut. He&#13;
and Mrs. Ott have a son, a sophomore in&#13;
college.&#13;
&#13;
1937&#13;
Dr. Eugene O. Bovee ('37) was recently&#13;
named associate professor in sanitary engineering research at the Phelps Sanitary&#13;
Engineeering Research Laboratory of the&#13;
University of Florida at Gainesville, Fla.&#13;
He has spent the past six years in the&#13;
Biology Department. His new duties are&#13;
research and teaching on the graduate level&#13;
of the microbiology of Sanitation problems.&#13;
The teaching includes seminars and direction of graduate thesis.&#13;
Eugene's family includes a daughter,&#13;
Francis Anne, a freshman at Rice University, a son Gregory who is a high school&#13;
sophomore, and a son Matthew 3 years of&#13;
age. Their address is 3652 N. W. 7th Ave.,&#13;
Gainesville, Florida.&#13;
1938&#13;
Vera Hayes Campbell '38 received her&#13;
Master of Arts Degree in speech and drama&#13;
from Colorado State College, Greeley,&#13;
Colorado in August. During the 1960-61&#13;
repertory seasons, she was a member of&#13;
the Little Theatre of the Rockies, appearing&#13;
in Pygmalion, Gigi, Picnic, Romeo&#13;
and&#13;
Juliet, Look H omeward Angel and the&#13;
Gazebo. Mrs. Campbell is English and&#13;
speech instructor of the Dunlap Community&#13;
School.&#13;
1939&#13;
William E. Clemens '39 is the guidance&#13;
director at the Willow Community schools&#13;
in Cherokee County and Mrs. Clemens&#13;
(Ruth Thatcher '39) t eaches 2nd grade. Bill&#13;
and Ruth live in Storm Lake at 2006 W.&#13;
5th St.&#13;
1942&#13;
Dr. &amp; Mrs. John A. Adamson (La Vonne&#13;
Wertz ..42) and their three children have&#13;
recently moved to a new home in Dinuba,&#13;
California. Their new address is 386 Nichols&#13;
A venue, Dinuba. During the past year&#13;
La Vonne has become very interested in the&#13;
study of Communism. She attended The&#13;
Southern California School of Anti-Communism in Los Angeles in August, and&#13;
since that time has been speaking to service&#13;
clubs, church groups and Women's clubs on&#13;
the subject.&#13;
&#13;
1943&#13;
Dorothy E. Brown '43 is an elementary&#13;
classroom teacher in Fort Dodge.&#13;
1947&#13;
Harold D. Minor '47 moved September 1&#13;
to the Department of Adult Publications,&#13;
Editorial Division, General Board of Education of the Methodist Church in Nashville,&#13;
as editor of Adult Teacher and Wesley&#13;
Quarterly. He had spent the previous five&#13;
years as Director of Adult work, North&#13;
Carolina conference. H e lives at 906 Sutton&#13;
Hill Rd., Nashville, T enn.&#13;
1948&#13;
Harold A. Mulford, Jr. '48, a member of&#13;
the State University of Iowa College of&#13;
Medicine, was named to an associate professorship in psychiatry. Before joining&#13;
the SUI faculty in 1956 he taught at&#13;
Northwest Missouri State College. The&#13;
holder of a SUI Ph. D. degree, Mulford is&#13;
director of the division of alcoholism&#13;
studies at the university.&#13;
1949&#13;
H enry Langstraat, Jr. '49, having obtained a masters degree, is teaching in the&#13;
Washington Elementary school in Phoenix,&#13;
Arizona. Washington Elementary is in a&#13;
rapidly growing school district in rapidly&#13;
growing Phoenix.&#13;
1950&#13;
Roy Haenfler '50 is enrolled at Arizona&#13;
State University. He is working towards&#13;
his M. A. Degree in sch ool administration.&#13;
His present address is 1018 Dorsey Lane,&#13;
Apt. 1, Tempe, Arizona.&#13;
Norman Clark ('50) has been elected&#13;
secretary and a m ember of the board of&#13;
directors of Sc,a rborough &amp; Company in&#13;
Chicago. The comp,a ny specializes in insurance for banks. Norman lives at 4613&#13;
W. 100th Place, Oak Lawn, Illinois.&#13;
1951&#13;
Darrell V. Mitchell '51, Methodist minister at Sidney, Iowa , spent nine months of&#13;
Clinical Pastoral Training, under the auspices of the National Council for Clinical&#13;
Training, at two institutions affiliated with&#13;
the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, Kansas. He took his training at the Topeka&#13;
State Hospital and the Boys Industrial&#13;
School. Five other ministers from oth er&#13;
&#13;
43&#13;
&#13;
denominations were in training with Rev.&#13;
Mitchell.&#13;
J. Porter Kaplan '51 is enrolled for the&#13;
academic year 1961-62 in the graduate program of education and training in social&#13;
work in the school of Social Welfare at&#13;
Florida State University at Tallahassee,&#13;
Fla.&#13;
&#13;
1952&#13;
Fred A. Brown '52 has been awarded a&#13;
National Science Foundation Academic&#13;
Year Institute at the University of Illinois.&#13;
He is studying for a Master of Arts degree in Mathematics and will teach again&#13;
in the fall of '62. The Browns have 5&#13;
children, Debbie 11, Tommy 10, Barbara 9,&#13;
Joan 7, and Rodney 6. They live at 1210&#13;
Garden Hills Dr., Champaign, Illinois.&#13;
Dr. Alton W. (Skip) Cowan '52 is Superintendent of schools at Eaton Rapids,&#13;
Michigan. He and Mrs. Cowan (Briar Cliff&#13;
'53) and their children, Mike, David, Patrick, Jane, Nancy and Christopher moved&#13;
there from the Catskill Mountains in New&#13;
York this past summer.&#13;
Skip obtained his Ph. D. in Education&#13;
from Michigan State University in 1960.&#13;
The address in Eaton Rapids is 114 S.&#13;
East St.&#13;
Robert R. Eidsmoe '52 has been appointed executive council member for the Fourth&#13;
judicial district for the junior bar section,&#13;
Iowa State Bar Association. Bob is a&#13;
Sioux City Attorney.&#13;
The junior bar section is comprised of&#13;
lawyers under the age of 36, and its work&#13;
is to assist members of the senior bar with&#13;
various functions.&#13;
Bob is a partner in the law firm of&#13;
Gleysteen, Nelson, Harper, Kunze and&#13;
Eidsmoe. He obtained his law de,g ree at&#13;
the New York University school of law.&#13;
1954&#13;
Audrey Johnson ('54) (Mrs. Cliff Wobken) has moved to Des Moines, Iowa where&#13;
her husband is an account supervisor with&#13;
Meredith Press, division of Meredith Publishing Company. He was formerly an&#13;
assistant Manager with Montgomery Ward&#13;
in Appleton, Wisconsin. The Wobkens live&#13;
at 4039 70th St., Des Moines 22, Iowa.&#13;
Kenneth Van Der Sloot '54 received his&#13;
&#13;
44&#13;
&#13;
masters of music education degree from the&#13;
University of Colorado this past summer.&#13;
Ken is teaching music in Estherville. The&#13;
Van Der Sloots have two children, Lisa&#13;
Ann - 3 and Joel Ewayne - 1.&#13;
&#13;
1955&#13;
On June 30, 1961, Michael E. Paradasinos&#13;
'55 became an American citizen and his last&#13;
name was changed to the American version&#13;
"Par adise". Michael is employed by the&#13;
Weld County School District in Colorado&#13;
and teaches in Milliken High School.&#13;
1956&#13;
Robert J. Lar son '56 has been appointed&#13;
special assistant probation officer of the&#13;
juvenile court by the Woodbury County&#13;
board of supervisors. Larson is a partner&#13;
in the law fi r m of McQueen, Forker, Dandos and Larson. Mrs. Larson is Marlys&#13;
Kinnas '58.&#13;
Charles Phenix '56 is employed in the&#13;
health department of Rochester, Minn. He&#13;
is the City Sanitar ian, handling all situations that pertain to sanitation. His address is 428 6th St. S. W. in Rochester.&#13;
Paul W. Sweeney, Jr. '56 is doing graduate study at Oberlin College, working toward a master of Arts in their teaching&#13;
program.&#13;
Lucy Seiko Yoshioka '56 (Mrs. Walter&#13;
Buhler )is teaching private voice and piano&#13;
lessons and lives at 8707 S. W. Terwilliger&#13;
Blvd., Portland 19, Oregon.&#13;
1957&#13;
Jack E. Lamb '57 is associated as a&#13;
senior partner with the firm of L. Morris&#13;
Clark and Associates, New York Finger&#13;
Lakes only Registered Securities Underwriters.&#13;
Bob and Pat Tiemans (Both '57) and&#13;
their 3 year old daughter, Robin, have&#13;
moved to DeKalb, Illinois, where Bob is&#13;
assistant professor in the Speech department at Northern Illinois University. Their&#13;
address is 128 Tilton Park Drive.&#13;
1958&#13;
Keith Roeper '58 r eceived his CPA (Certified Public Accountant) certificate at a&#13;
meeting of the Iowa Society of Certified&#13;
Public Accountants in Iowa City on Sep-&#13;
&#13;
tember 28th. Mr. Roeper passed the exam&#13;
in May. He is an employee of the firm of&#13;
Keightley and Pedersen in Sioux City.&#13;
1959&#13;
Gaylord Rasmussen '5,9 is a section manager at Sioux City's J. C. Penny Co. the&#13;
Rasmussens have two daughters, Jill Suzann, born in December 1959, and Tracy&#13;
Ann born in December, 1960. They live at&#13;
1206 South Paxton, in Sioux City.&#13;
Merlin A. Anderson '5,9 is a member of&#13;
the faculty of the Maple Valley Community Schools in Mapleton, Iowa. He is&#13;
director of publications and is instructor&#13;
in journalism, American history and English. His address is 602 South 7th St.,&#13;
Mapleton, Iowa.&#13;
David A. Woods '59 has been transferred&#13;
to Charlotte,&#13;
North Carolina. His new&#13;
assignment is a Buying Department Manager for the Charlotte Branche of Ralston&#13;
Purina Company.&#13;
The Woods have a&#13;
young son Bradley and live at 3214 Frederick Place in Charlotte.&#13;
Alan Lovrein '59 is working toward his&#13;
Master's Degree in Psychiatric Social Work&#13;
at the University of Nebraska. He plans&#13;
on finishing his work there in June 1962.&#13;
1960&#13;
Albert A. (Al) Anderson '60 has transferred from the Boston University school&#13;
of Theology to the graduate school at Boston U. where he is working on a Master of&#13;
Arts degree in Philosophy. Mrs. Anderson&#13;
( Susan McMurray .. 62) and Al live at 14&#13;
Buswell, Boston 15, Mass.&#13;
Mrs. Lovrein (Jane Lockwod .. 60) who&#13;
was secretary for the Admissions Office at&#13;
Morningside, is working for the Midwest&#13;
Life Insurance Co. Alan and Jane live at&#13;
1236 North .2 6th St., in Lincoln, Nebraska.&#13;
1961&#13;
Eugene Kaczinski '61 is employed as Production Supervisor at Nielson Coupon&#13;
Cleaning House in Clinton. His address is&#13;
2500 1/2North 3rd St.&#13;
1962&#13;
Robert E. O'Harrow ('62) is employed by&#13;
the Aurora Police Department. Mrs. O'Harrow (Constance B. Moore . .61) and Bob&#13;
have a son Dennis born in August 1960.&#13;
They live at 1170 Elmira, Aurora, Colorado.&#13;
&#13;
WILL HE KEEP OR HAND OFF?&#13;
One of the fringe benefits that go along&#13;
with being editor of the Morningside is that&#13;
an editor's page can be inserted and the&#13;
editor can use a portion of the space to&#13;
proudly print a picture of his first grandchild. The editor's wife demands equal&#13;
recognition as the grandmother.&#13;
I think it is understandable to all that the&#13;
Morningsider cannot print pictures of grandchildren of Morningsiders as such, unless of&#13;
course the grandfather is edito. or one or&#13;
r&#13;
both parents are Morningsiders.&#13;
Actually that is the case of Craig Patrick&#13;
Croston shown above. His mother is Judy&#13;
Larsen '54 and his father is Don Croston '56.&#13;
&#13;
They live at 9920 112th S. W. in Tacoma,&#13;
Washington where Don is a Lieutenant in&#13;
the Air Force and stationed at McChord&#13;
A. F. B.&#13;
&#13;
45&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORY&#13;
1891&#13;
Wm. Jepson,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
H. W. Mahood, Deceased&#13;
J. B. Trimble, Deceased&#13;
Ed Mahood, Deceased&#13;
J. H . O'Donoghue, Deceased&#13;
1893&#13;
Thomas F. Warner,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
1894&#13;
Edward M. Corbett, Deceased&#13;
1895&#13;
E. L. Benedict, Deceased&#13;
F. J. Plondke, Deceased&#13;
1896&#13;
James Benedict, Deceased&#13;
Frank Empey,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Henry J . Holbert, Deceased&#13;
F . W. Mitchell, Sherwood Manor,&#13;
900 Leuda, Fort Worth, Texas&#13;
Dora A. Eisentraut, (Mrs. Arthur&#13;
A. Byrkit), 1147 S . Ardmore&#13;
Ave., Los Angeles, California&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
E. T. Antrim, Deceased&#13;
Etta Fourmer, (Mrs. Everett Bettenger), 607 8th St., Convalescent Center, Fort Worth, Texas&#13;
1897&#13;
Frederick G. Henke, (Charles&#13;
City), 307 2nd Ave., Charles&#13;
City, Iowa&#13;
1899&#13;
Sidney L. Chandler, D eceased&#13;
Asbury Dean, Deceased&#13;
Walter Bruce Empey, 13505 S.&#13;
E. River Rd., Portland 22,&#13;
Oregon&#13;
Jacob&#13;
Eisentrant, 6 Southard&#13;
St., Trenton, N. J.&#13;
Adam R. Hastings, Unknown&#13;
E . C. Richards, Deceased&#13;
1900&#13;
Carie Bartlett, Deceased&#13;
Hattie M. Bartlett,&#13;
(Mrs. W.&#13;
Bruce Empey), Deceased&#13;
James A. Davies, D eceased&#13;
Edna Hathaway, (Mrs. Boylon)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Alfred H. Jastram, Remsen, Iowa&#13;
Clarence Van Horne,&#13;
Parshall,&#13;
No. Dak.&#13;
Robt. N. Van Horne, Deceased&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Charles&#13;
Clara&#13;
Yetter,&#13;
Flint), Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Mary Churchill, Arthur, Iowa&#13;
1901&#13;
Harry Adair, Deceased&#13;
Allison G. Folsom, Unknown&#13;
A. L . Haines, 224 Cherry St.,&#13;
Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
Herbert K eck,&#13;
805 Hinman,&#13;
Evanston, Illinois&#13;
Anna Marsh, (Mrs Oscar Reinhart), Unknown&#13;
A. J. Quirin, Deceased&#13;
Oscar Reinhart, Deceased&#13;
Lincoln F. Sch a ub, (Charles City)&#13;
The Brevoort, 11 Fifth Ave.,&#13;
New York, N. Y.&#13;
Jennie R. Skewis, 303 Lake Ave.,&#13;
--Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
E. D. Conoway, Unknown&#13;
Lulu Flukes, (M.rs. Will Ginger),&#13;
Buffalo Gap, So. Dak.&#13;
Mrs. Francis A. Ginn. 594 Elm&#13;
St., Carlsbad, California&#13;
Cora Millie Mason. Unknown&#13;
Mary Richards, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
46&#13;
&#13;
1902&#13;
Ross B. Brown,&#13;
3815 Jackson&#13;
St.. Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Bessie M.Carr, (Mrs. Cyrus L.&#13;
Gilbe r t), 903 S. 156th St.,&#13;
Seattle, Washington&#13;
Florence M. Cate, Deceased&#13;
Charles Eberly, Lawton, Iowa&#13;
Emma Flathers,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Guy Frary, 304 Canby, Vermillion, So. Dak.&#13;
Marian E. Gantt, Deceased&#13;
Samuel Knoer, Deceased&#13;
George A. P latts, D eceased&#13;
Fred Jay Seaver, Box 1057,&#13;
Winter Park, Florida&#13;
Ethel Walker,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Michael&#13;
Loftus),&#13;
1055 No. Kingsley&#13;
Drive, Los Angeles, California&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Laura Empey, Unknown&#13;
Hope&#13;
P eters.&#13;
( Mrs.&#13;
Maurice&#13;
Fogg),&#13;
3705 Shenandoah&#13;
Dallas, Texas&#13;
Olive Siman, (Mrs. Harry Cain)&#13;
2207 Central St., Evanston, Ill.&#13;
1903&#13;
George F . Barsalou, Odin, Minn.&#13;
James Davies, Deceased&#13;
Albert B urton Gilbert, Deceased&#13;
George Gilbert, Decea sed&#13;
Mrs. L. W. Crane, (Sophie Hieby)&#13;
4783 34th St., San Diego&#13;
Califonria&#13;
Alfred H. Jastram, Deceased&#13;
Albe rt Kuntz, 7355 Pershing&#13;
Ave., University City, Mo.&#13;
M. F. McDowell, 3090 Myrtle&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. J. McIsaac, Deceased&#13;
Frank Mossman, Deceased&#13;
Hans N issen , Deceased&#13;
Alexander G. Ruthven,&#13;
G. D.,&#13;
Frankfort, Michigan&#13;
D. M. Simpson, Deceased&#13;
Lorne F. Smyle,&#13;
605 1st Ave.,&#13;
Rock Rapids, Iowa&#13;
Daniel Starch (Charles City College). 14 Burgess Rd.,&#13;
Scarsdale, N. Y.&#13;
Pearl Woodford, (Mrs. E. Ill.&#13;
Buchner ), Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Mina Ayres, Unknown&#13;
Ethel Bowers, Early, Iowa&#13;
Charles Carhuff, Unknown&#13;
Elsie Carter,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Mrs. David Cassaday, 2406 E.&#13;
Broadway, Long Beach, Calif.&#13;
Home r Chandler, Unknown&#13;
Louise Cody, Unknown&#13;
Francis E . Dahm,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ernestine&#13;
Day, Unknown&#13;
Grace Depue,&#13;
&#13;
Unknown&#13;
&#13;
Flora&#13;
I. Dunlap, (Mrs. Flora&#13;
Tiss) , Algona, Iowa&#13;
Grace Dunlap,&#13;
(Mrs. Charles&#13;
Kennedy), 15 Washington&#13;
Deadwood. So. Dak.&#13;
Florene Gilbert, (Mrs. Samuel A.&#13;
Torbert), Dickens, Iowa&#13;
Servington Gilbert,&#13;
6324 Warren&#13;
Ave., Minneapolis 24, Minn.&#13;
Sophie Hieby,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
L. W .&#13;
Crane), 4 783 34th, San Diego,&#13;
Californ ia&#13;
Annie Johnson, (Mrs. Joe Stewart), Unknown&#13;
Myrtle Lothian, (Mrs. Myrtle&#13;
Whipple),&#13;
1241 N. B e rendo,&#13;
Los Angeles 27, California&#13;
&#13;
George Marquart. Unknown&#13;
Ralph Milliken, RFD, Los Banos,&#13;
California&#13;
John Newton, 714 25th St.,&#13;
Siou x City, Iowa&#13;
Mabel Oaks,&#13;
(Mrs. George Brosius)&#13;
213 Forest, Vermillion, S. Dak.&#13;
Eda Katherine&#13;
Palmer, Unknown&#13;
Stella Prouty, (Mrs. John F.&#13;
Joseph) ,&#13;
1501 Nebraska St.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ada Seave r. Friendship&#13;
Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Mabel&#13;
Smylie,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
C. M.&#13;
Davidson), 209 Acacia Ave. ,&#13;
Monrovia, California&#13;
Ruth Swartz, Unknown&#13;
Effie White, (Mrs. L. H. Clark),&#13;
939 No. 2nd., Rockford, Ill.&#13;
Lulu Woolhiser , (Mrs. Westrom),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
1904&#13;
Ira R. Aldrich,&#13;
760 E . 14th.,&#13;
Coquille, Oregon&#13;
Stanley Carson, 602 S. Metcalf&#13;
St., Lima, Ohio&#13;
Grace Darling,&#13;
(Mrs. Stanley&#13;
Carson ), 602 S. Metcalf St.,&#13;
Lima, Ohio&#13;
George Finch, 966 Magnolia Ave.,&#13;
Los Angeles, California&#13;
David E. Hadden, Deceased&#13;
Arthur W. Henke,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
John A . (Ackenback) K ellogg,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Mrs. Howard Maynard,&#13;
(Mabel&#13;
Killam),&#13;
5420 Lauren Ct. ,&#13;
Bloomfield, Michigan&#13;
Cora Krueger&#13;
(Cha rles City )&#13;
900 Rockford Rd.,&#13;
Charles City, Iowa&#13;
J. Ralph Magee, 1864 Sherman&#13;
Ave., Evanston, Illinois&#13;
Albert Maynard, Deceased&#13;
Narcissa Miller,&#13;
(Mrs. A . R.&#13;
Toothaker),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Wm. E. Sanders, 3005 E . 2nd ,&#13;
Tucson, Arizona&#13;
Lydia T rimble, Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Reginald Acheson, 5008 Morningside Ave.., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
.&#13;
Wilhelmina Barth , (Mrs. Jones),&#13;
509 So. Pointer Ave.,&#13;
Whittier, California&#13;
Fannie Beacham, (Mrs. Herbert&#13;
Wilson) , Fa·rnhamville, Iowa&#13;
Porter Boals, 505 5th Ave.,&#13;
Payette, Ida ho&#13;
Steve Day, Hubbard, Oregon&#13;
Wm. James Fair. I da Grove, Ia.&#13;
Nina Faulk, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Fields, (Mrs. Otto Baden),&#13;
Jasper, Minnesota&#13;
Katheryn Gibson, (Mrs . Kat hryn&#13;
Long), 1541 Allston St.,&#13;
Houston, Texa s&#13;
Davis Hall,&#13;
Starkweather, No. Da k.&#13;
Walter Harding, Unknown&#13;
Bessie Hargrave, (Mrs. G. W.&#13;
Todd), Unknown&#13;
Floyd Harrington, Unknown&#13;
J ohn Hinsdale, Artisian,&#13;
Calif.&#13;
Wm. D iedrick Lukens,&#13;
Seattle, Washington&#13;
E thel L ymer, Unknown&#13;
Bertha R. Lindhorst, Unknown&#13;
Mabel&#13;
Kellogg, Unknown&#13;
Fred Null, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORY&#13;
William M. Richards,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lillian Shumaker, (Mrs. F. E.&#13;
Walchter), 115 Dorchester Ave.&#13;
Orlando, Florida&#13;
Alowzo Alphonzo Sifert, Unknown&#13;
Fae Siman, (Mrs. W. R. Mahood)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Jennie&#13;
Smith, Unknown&#13;
Almeda Wadhams,&#13;
1518 Court,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Fred B. Williams, 509 E. Madis on St.. R a pid City, So. Dak.&#13;
1905&#13;
w. K. Blackwell, Woodbine, Iowa&#13;
Rena&#13;
Bowker .&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
F. H.&#13;
Trimble),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Carrie Brown, Deceased&#13;
Charles E. Carroll, Unknown&#13;
Myrtilla Cook, (Mrs. W. Lee&#13;
Lewis ),&#13;
2323&#13;
Central Park&#13;
Ave ., Evanston, Illinois&#13;
W. E. Debenham, 8 Country&#13;
Club Rd., Danville, Illinois&#13;
Mabel E. Ellerbroek, (Mrs. Osher&#13;
Schlaifer), Unknown&#13;
Emma Fair, (Mrs. D .. L. Young),&#13;
4338 E mpress, Encino, Calif.&#13;
Virginia&#13;
Fair,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Joseph&#13;
Trimble),&#13;
Galva, Iowa&#13;
Beatrice Gary. (Mrs. James Mclearn)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Cyrus L. Gilbert, 903 S. 156th&#13;
St.,&#13;
Seattle, Washington&#13;
Anna Goodall, Deceased&#13;
Earl B. Hanna, D eceased&#13;
c. E. Harding, Deceased&#13;
Anna&#13;
Holingworth,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
J.&#13;
Wilbur Green), Unknown&#13;
E. H. Hulser, Deceased&#13;
.&#13;
Clara Killa m, (Mrs. Clara Fmch)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Maude Kling. (Mrs. R. H. Darling)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Coralinn Lockin,&#13;
(Mrs . H ugh&#13;
Miller), Maple ton, Iowa&#13;
Alice Marsh, (Mrs. H. D . Newton), Unknown&#13;
Carl W. Maynard, D eceased&#13;
John W. McCarthy, 77333 . Appuson Laguna Beach, California&#13;
Normal McCay, Deceased&#13;
Wil J. Morgan, Deceased&#13;
George J. Poppenheimer,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Ralph E . Root, Deceased&#13;
Herbert B. Saylor, Deceased&#13;
Simon D. Stulken,, U nknown&#13;
D. L. Young. Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Nellie Arthur, Unknown&#13;
Ora&#13;
Barringer,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Hugh&#13;
Barbour), Emmetsburg, Iowa&#13;
Edwin Bartlett, 281 El. Bonita,&#13;
Millbrae, California&#13;
Ora Black, (Mrs. Ora B rown),&#13;
Morrisville, N . Y.&#13;
Pearl M. Boddy, (Mrs. George&#13;
8807 15th Ave.&#13;
McKerchen),&#13;
N. E., Seattle, Washington&#13;
James Brandow, U nknown&#13;
Lilliee P. Brassfield, Unknown&#13;
Mary Brassfield, Unknown&#13;
Bessie R. Brown, Unknown&#13;
Clive Brown, Unknown&#13;
Ida Bryan, Emmetsburg, I owa&#13;
Roscoe Bryant, Unknown&#13;
Zula Culbertson,&#13;
(Mrs. J . W.&#13;
McCarthy), 10303 E ldora Ave.,&#13;
Sunland, California&#13;
.&#13;
Zilla Deno, (Mrs. Harry Henion),&#13;
2345 East Main, Mesa, Arizona&#13;
&#13;
Anna Donery, 113 E. Flores St.,&#13;
Tucson,&#13;
Arizona&#13;
Nina&#13;
Foster,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Everard&#13;
Hinshaw),&#13;
204 Forest Dr.,&#13;
Falls C hurch, Va.&#13;
Chas. Giddings, U nknown&#13;
Bertha Godfrey, 427 Ash Ave.,&#13;
Ames, Iowa&#13;
Pearl Graybil, U nknown&#13;
Ella Greenlee, Unknown&#13;
George Hanna, Unknown&#13;
George A. Hanna, U nknown&#13;
John Harman,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Edith Howarth, Unknown&#13;
Fred Howlett,&#13;
1429 Sun.,&#13;
Chico, California&#13;
Raymond Humphreys, U nknown&#13;
J. W. Erwin, RFD, Pierson , I owa&#13;
Mae&#13;
K ennedy,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Waler&#13;
Bushby), Ireton, Iowa&#13;
Edna Kline, 6547 37th Ave. S.&#13;
W., Seattle, Washington&#13;
Fred N . McCarthy, Unknown&#13;
William McKee, U nknown&#13;
Anna McQueen&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Samuel Langdell, U nknow n&#13;
Luella Marquart,&#13;
1802 Geor ge&#13;
St., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Marion&#13;
Metcalf, Deceased&#13;
Elsie Miller, (Mrs. Emery&#13;
M.&#13;
Johnson ) , 12 C hester Ave.,&#13;
Danville, Illinois&#13;
Myrta Millner,&#13;
(Mrs. E. C&#13;
Richards),&#13;
1 240 N. 21st St,&#13;
Salem, Oregon&#13;
Fred C. Mossmon. Marcus, Iowa&#13;
Anna Teresa Naughton. U nknown&#13;
Glen Pruden,&#13;
4509 Wolff,&#13;
Denver, Colorado&#13;
Way Reeder,&#13;
U nknown&#13;
Elmer Sadler, Unknown&#13;
George Search , Unknown&#13;
Walter Sloan,&#13;
2404 So. Cedar,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Maude S mock, Unknown&#13;
Sadie Van Horne, (Mrs. Charles&#13;
Harding). Deceased&#13;
Alice A. Wilcox,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
C. R. Yeager, 431 West Hill,&#13;
San Antonio 1 , Texas&#13;
1906&#13;
Estie Boddy, (Mrs. T. A .. Ware),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Asa L. Browe r, Deceased&#13;
Herbert J. Ca lkins, D eceased&#13;
Gertrude Crossan , (Mrs. J. W.&#13;
Kindig),&#13;
3800&#13;
Ridge Ave.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
F. V. Dubois,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Eva C. Erskine, (Mrs. W. H&#13;
Debenha m), 8 Country&#13;
Club&#13;
Rd. , Danville, Illinois&#13;
E . M. Everha rt, Deceased&#13;
Ruby A. Flinn,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Ruby&#13;
Vennink) , Deceased&#13;
o. Merrill Foote, 1503 E. Walnut&#13;
St., Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
Mary Gilbert, Deceased&#13;
Corwin Hartzell, Deceased&#13;
Lon Hawkins, Deceased&#13;
Ralph E. H eilman, Deceased&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson, 505 N. W&#13;
Wallula&#13;
Ave.,&#13;
Gresham, Ore.&#13;
James Kindig, Deceased&#13;
&#13;
Berthemia McCarthy,&#13;
3519 Vine&#13;
Ave.,&#13;
S iou x City, Iowa&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Geor ge E. Millner,&#13;
Ruby Trimble (Mrs. Wil l Haggith),&#13;
5433 Gollingwood&#13;
Dr,&#13;
Vancouver, B. C.&#13;
&#13;
Ernest&#13;
Wellemeyer&#13;
( Charles&#13;
City) , Deceased&#13;
J. J. Wellmeyer (Charles City),&#13;
Wyandotte High School,&#13;
Kansas City, Kansas&#13;
Roy Minkler,&#13;
609 9th St.,&#13;
Brookings, So. Dak.&#13;
John W. Wunn, U nknown&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Wilbur Allen, Unknown&#13;
Le Roy Anderson, Unknown&#13;
Ethel Annstrong, Unknown&#13;
Dora&#13;
Barlley,&#13;
(Mrs. Dora&#13;
Nichols), Unknown&#13;
Mary Elizabeth Bartlett, (Mrs.&#13;
Hunt),&#13;
2214 Cleveland Rd ,&#13;
Wooster, Ohio&#13;
Neva Bartlett, (Mrs. Clyde V .&#13;
Smithson), 229 11th Ave. N.,&#13;
Buhl, Idaho&#13;
Martha&#13;
Batcheller,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Wm. E . Batcheller, Unknown&#13;
Ada Beach, Unknown&#13;
Eva Beacham,&#13;
(Mrs. E. J . Merriman), Box 900,&#13;
Corpus Christi, Texas&#13;
Rena Booker, Unknown&#13;
Mary Katherine Brandow,&#13;
U nknown&#13;
Pearl Bowers, Unknown&#13;
Artimus B rower , 1242 Dakota&#13;
St. S., Huron, So. Dak.&#13;
Edith Burns, (Mrs. B. G. Barto),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Grace Currier , Deceased&#13;
Esthe r Fallein, U nknown&#13;
Fred Gilbert, Newburg, Oregon&#13;
Pearl&#13;
Gooch,&#13;
(Mrs Raymond&#13;
Wilson) , Sac City, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. Nellie Goodla nde r, Unknown&#13;
John Haafke , B r onson , Iowa&#13;
H a rrie t Hall (Mrs. F. J. Hagy),&#13;
4435 Dayton St.,&#13;
San Diego&#13;
1 5, California&#13;
Estella Harding, (Mrs. D. C.&#13;
Hall),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Martha Hargrave,&#13;
(Mrs. Ora&#13;
Gustin),&#13;
D eceased&#13;
Mamie Harrington, Unknown&#13;
Harvey Harrison, 3914 Lakeport&#13;
Rd., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ne ttie Hartzell,&#13;
(Mrs. Parks),&#13;
Akron, Col orado&#13;
James Havens, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Hay, Unknown&#13;
Lauretta Hileman, Unknown&#13;
L . W. Hiron s , Early, Iowa&#13;
Ammon Howarth. U nknown&#13;
John Howlett, Kanawha, Iowa&#13;
Robert Jones, Unknown&#13;
Ella Kamm, U nknown&#13;
Maude Keister,&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Anders&#13;
Jensen),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Geor ge Lamb, Unknown&#13;
Florence Lukins, Unknown&#13;
Pearl Mason , Deceased&#13;
Hugh May, Un kn own&#13;
Eunice Moore, Unknown&#13;
Stella Mu r phy, Unknown&#13;
Jessie Noble, Unknown&#13;
Ward Nor t h craft, Unknown&#13;
Arthur Omtvedt,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Gertrude Parker,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ray Patterson, Springfield, S. D&#13;
Beulah Peck,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Demia E. Peck,&#13;
Long Beach , California&#13;
Claren ce Peden, Deceased&#13;
Walden Pendell,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Frank Raw, Unknown&#13;
Adolf Scheel, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORY&#13;
Edith Belle Search, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Sloan, (Mrs. E. L . Frost),&#13;
6551 Densmore,&#13;
Van Nuys, California&#13;
Claude Smith,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Nora Tadlock,&#13;
(Mrs . William&#13;
McEllath),&#13;
Moville, Iowa&#13;
Hieman Van Dyke, 3914 4th&#13;
Ave., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Edna&#13;
Webster,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Leslie&#13;
Frost),&#13;
7213 S. E . Durrison,&#13;
Portland, Oregon&#13;
Robert B . Wylie, Deceased&#13;
R. C. Young, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
John Charles Bass, Deceased&#13;
E. A. Bennet, Deceased&#13;
Nellie&#13;
Blood,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Corwin&#13;
Taylor),&#13;
Friendship Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Mary Mable Chamberlain,&#13;
(Mrs. Herbert Haight),&#13;
Hilger, Montana&#13;
Alice Cole, (Mrs. E . J. Wintersteen), Deceased&#13;
Stanley B. Collins, Deceased&#13;
Florence&#13;
Davidson, (Mrs. Perry&#13;
Bond) , Deceased&#13;
Leonia M. Delay, Deceased&#13;
Ella Dickson, (Mrs. P. L . Blackshire,,&#13;
205 Watson,&#13;
Fayetteville, Arkansas&#13;
Cora Frear, (Mrs. Lon Hawkins/&#13;
1850 Beacon, Eugene, Oregon&#13;
P . E. Fredendoll, Deceased&#13;
Earl James Fry, Deceased&#13;
H. E. Groom, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Haskins, (Mrs. Carl W.&#13;
Maynard),&#13;
317 Colorado,&#13;
Pueblo, Colorado&#13;
Genevieve Howard (Mrs. R. B.&#13;
Hayes),&#13;
324 So. 5th St.,&#13;
Platsmouth, Nebraska&#13;
H. E. Jones, Deceased&#13;
Ida Elsie Kilborne,&#13;
(Mrs. R. J. Cook)&#13;
Wessington Springs, So. Dak.&#13;
Wm. Henry Lease, Deceased&#13;
Clarence G. Manning, Deceased&#13;
William McCay, 332 Park Ave.,&#13;
Long Beach, California&#13;
Martha MacDonald,&#13;
(Mrs. J. V. McKelvey)&#13;
2117 Graeber St.,&#13;
Ames, Iowa&#13;
R . C. Nichols, Deceased&#13;
Chester F. Rissler, Deceased&#13;
Douglas Ford Robbins, Deceased&#13;
Glenn M. Squires, Deceased&#13;
Harry Nelson Staples, Deceased&#13;
Corwin Taylor, Friendship Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Henry C. Taylor, 1311 W. Laurel,&#13;
Independence, Kansas&#13;
Mabel Vesta Towner,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
J. Ray Tumbleson,&#13;
14974 Valley Vista Blvd.,&#13;
Sherman Oaks, California&#13;
Jay Whitaker, Deceased&#13;
Faith Foster Woodford, Deceased&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Alexander Adams,&#13;
3860 Crenshaw Blvd.,&#13;
Los Angeles 8, California&#13;
Dora Armour,&#13;
(Mrs. M.&#13;
L.&#13;
Sawyer) , 155 Massol Ave.,&#13;
Los Gatos, California&#13;
Persis A. Babcock, 302 Quimby&#13;
St., Ida Grove, Iowa&#13;
0. R. Boynton , Unknown&#13;
Harry Branton, 5511 Magnilia&#13;
Ave. , Riverside, California&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
Varena Brenner, Unknown&#13;
Mattie Bridenbaugh, (Mrs. L. P.&#13;
Ericksen), Deceased&#13;
George W. Bruce, 540 N. 15th&#13;
St., Salem, Oregon&#13;
Lora Butler, 224 26th Avenue,&#13;
San Francisco, California&#13;
Margaret Cable, Unknown&#13;
Carl Albert Carlson, Unknown&#13;
Paul Carson,&#13;
Box 202,&#13;
Morenci , Arizona&#13;
William H. Clary, Unknown&#13;
R. N. Claybough, Unknown&#13;
Rosella Clemons, Unknown&#13;
Nora Collins, Friendship Haven,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Elmer Conoy, Laurens, Iowa&#13;
Ida Marinda Day, 3600 N. Main&#13;
St., Soquel, California&#13;
Philip E. DeGrielle, 212 W.&#13;
Okabena,&#13;
Worthington , Minn.&#13;
Hazel Deno , ( Mrs. Hazel Horton)&#13;
Box 252, Akron, Colorado&#13;
Glen Dugan,&#13;
1247 Vine, Abilene, Texas&#13;
Edna Gertrude Fish, (Mrs. Alois&#13;
W. Uhl), Unknown&#13;
Irene Griswold Fitz, (Mrs . Frank&#13;
Davis), Manson, Iowa&#13;
Pearl Foster, Unknown&#13;
Laura Foulds,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Osroe Charles Fuch,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Mabel Gibson, Unknown&#13;
Hazel Gooch, (Mrs. Fred Bauer)&#13;
Dixon, Illinois&#13;
Arthur Melbourne Gerber,&#13;
906 S. Cornelia, Sioux City, Ia&#13;
Fannie Hansen, Unknown&#13;
William L . Hay,&#13;
15805 N. E.&#13;
116th,&#13;
Redmond, Washington&#13;
Herbert C. Hayes,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Alfred Hinde, Early,&#13;
Iowa&#13;
Albert Lull Hollingsworth,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Sarah Lehman,&#13;
(Mrs. Dan Mosier&#13;
Box 267 , Penny Farms, Florida&#13;
Blanche Loomis, Unknown&#13;
Lowell Lucas, Unknown&#13;
Robert M. Luce, UnknownEmogene Lunde, Unknown&#13;
Carrie McCrory,&#13;
Box 114,&#13;
Duarte, California&#13;
Maurice E . McCurdy, Unknown&#13;
Robert R. McDougal, Unknown&#13;
Nellie Mathews, Unknown&#13;
Comart J. Mekkelson,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lottie E. Mitchell, (Mrs. M. L.&#13;
Peterson) ,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Lenard H. Morrill, Deceased&#13;
Charles T. Murray&#13;
P. 0. Box 413&#13;
Berryville, Arkansas&#13;
Mabel Nichols, Unknown&#13;
Alfred Olson, Unknown&#13;
Matholda Olson ,&#13;
(Mrs. Lorne&#13;
Smylie), Rock Rapids, Iowa&#13;
Myrtle Viola Osline, Unknown&#13;
Jay Vivian Patton, Unknown&#13;
Grace Peirce, Unknown&#13;
Homer J. Peirce, 314 Minehaha&#13;
Parkway,&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
George H. Peters, Unknown&#13;
Han R. Peterson, Unknown&#13;
Nettie Pierson, Unknown&#13;
Frank Pock, Unknown&#13;
P. Putnem, Unknown&#13;
Arthur D. Rahston, Unknown&#13;
Lillian Roelk, Unknown&#13;
Louise Sellooves, Unknown&#13;
Fred Schar, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
William B. Shoemaker,&#13;
Upham, No. Dakota&#13;
Frank Smock, Unknown&#13;
Bertha Steinhoff, Unknown&#13;
Pauline Steinhoff, Unknown&#13;
Nellie Swartz,&#13;
(Mrs. Earl D .&#13;
Hanna),&#13;
101 e. 31st St.,&#13;
Vancouver, Was hington&#13;
Gertrude Thompson,&#13;
(Mrs. W. S. Grant), Unknown&#13;
Gertrude Tucker,&#13;
(Mrs. M. J.&#13;
Fitzpatrick) ,&#13;
4135&#13;
Bachman&#13;
Place, San Diego, California&#13;
Alma Wells, (Mrs . Wm. Horton),&#13;
120 N. Madison,&#13;
Monrovia, California&#13;
Mabel&#13;
Williams,&#13;
(Mrs .&#13;
Ross&#13;
Clark) , 618 E. 5th St.,&#13;
Albert Lea, Minnesota&#13;
1908&#13;
T. C. Anderson,&#13;
5833 Osceola&#13;
Court,&#13;
Washington 16, D. C .&#13;
Florence&#13;
Clark,&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Frank&#13;
Heilman), 1821 4th Ave. S.,&#13;
Anoka, Minnesota&#13;
Arthur Cushman, 2705 S. E.&#13;
River Rd.,. Portland, Oregon&#13;
Ethel Delmage, (Mrs. John Bass)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Martha M. Fair, 37629 Fremont&#13;
Blvd. , Fremont,&#13;
California&#13;
James E . Fitzgerald,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Ethel Jane Haskins, (Mrs. D.&#13;
Parnell Mahoney), 4323 Perry&#13;
Way, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Frank Heilman, 1821 4th Ave.,&#13;
Anoka, Minnesota&#13;
Clare D. Horner 241 15th St.,&#13;
Richmond, California&#13;
Blanche B. Johns,&#13;
530 Welch, Ames, Iowa&#13;
Lura Matteson, (Mrs . T. C. Anderson),&#13;
5833 Osceola Court,&#13;
Washington 16, D. C.&#13;
Mirah&#13;
Mills, Deceased&#13;
Charles A. Richards, Deceased&#13;
Harry J. Richards,&#13;
1520 Sherwood,&#13;
Sacramento 22, California&#13;
H. H . Sawyer,&#13;
Victoria Hotel,&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
G. U. Senn, Deceased&#13;
W. G. Waterman, 2318 34th St.,&#13;
Des Moines. Iowa&#13;
Blanche V. Watts, 317 W. 9th&#13;
St., Spencer, Iowa&#13;
Claire J. Westcott,&#13;
819 N. 17th&#13;
Boise, Idaho&#13;
Helen Wilson,&#13;
(Mrs. Joseph Dunwell),&#13;
3333 Bryant.&#13;
Palo Alto, California&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Charles Abbot, Unknown&#13;
Edna Antrim, Unknown&#13;
Hay Bedel,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
V. R. Beebe,&#13;
2814 Sennett,&#13;
Wichita 11, Kansas&#13;
Effie M. Brown, Unknown&#13;
Kate Brown, Unknown&#13;
Minnie Brown, (Mrs. Roy Heal),&#13;
1003 N. 3rd St.,&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
Roy B. Buck, Washta, Iowa&#13;
Emma Cain, (Mrs . Clarence Russell),&#13;
650 Harrison Ave.,&#13;
Claremont, California&#13;
Sarah E. Clark, 1130 Buchanan&#13;
St., San Francisco 14, Calif.&#13;
Bertha Ewer,&#13;
817 8th St.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORY&#13;
Eva L. Fair, 4338 Empress Ave. ,&#13;
Encino, California&#13;
Lillian Fege nsbush&#13;
(Mrs. Korneles Knudson)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Bessie Gi lm an, Unknown&#13;
Shirley Hackett, Smithland, Iowa&#13;
Marguerite Hall a m.&#13;
(Mrs. A.&#13;
Lyon Mathews). Unknown&#13;
Arthur Hansen, Unknown&#13;
Lionel C. Harrison, Unknown&#13;
Albert Arthur Hartzell, Unknown&#13;
Albert H. H eld, Hinton Iowa&#13;
David J. Hileman , Unknown&#13;
Dora Hoy, Unknown&#13;
J. A. Hutchins, Unknown&#13;
Blanche E. Johnson.&#13;
(Mrs. Arthur Cushman)&#13;
2705 S. E. River Road ,&#13;
Portland 22, Oregon&#13;
Martha Johnson, Unknown&#13;
Ernest W. McClelland. Unknown&#13;
Ethel McDougal&#13;
Mitchell, s. D.&#13;
August A. Malada, (Mr s Edwin&#13;
H. Armstrong), Ma pleton. Ia.&#13;
Susa Mateer, (Mrs. M. E. Peterson).&#13;
Hanly Fall, Minn esota&#13;
Floyd J. Melvin, Unknown&#13;
Rohert Montgomery&#13;
Chicago, Illinois&#13;
Author Moore. Unknown&#13;
C. H. Noffsinger, Unknown&#13;
Mary O'Farrell.&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Clarence Reeves, Unknown&#13;
Lillia Mae Rodine, Unknown&#13;
De Nora Skinne r&#13;
Sioux Rapids , Iowa&#13;
Norm a n Smith, Marcus, Iowa&#13;
Harry Squires, Unknown&#13;
Louise&#13;
&#13;
Sparks.&#13;
&#13;
Unknown&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Welch, Mapleton Iowa&#13;
Emmett Wintermantel&#13;
Elkhart, Iowa&#13;
1909&#13;
Frederick&#13;
&#13;
Backemeyer&#13;
&#13;
57 East 38th St.. Apt. 104&#13;
Indianapolis 5 Indiana&#13;
Jeanette Bartlett,&#13;
(Mrs . Homer&#13;
Thompson),&#13;
Unknown&#13;
A. R. Bastian&#13;
Edgemont, So. Dakota&#13;
Jennie B. Bridenbaugh,&#13;
253 P lymouth Dr.&#13;
Pasadena,California&#13;
P ercy W. Brown. 24 W. 20th St ..&#13;
Eugene, Oregon&#13;
Edwin M . Brown&#13;
De Leon Springs, Florida&#13;
Paul H Collins,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Zula Correll&#13;
(Mrs. Percy Brown), Unknown&#13;
John R. Dav&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Mae Fry. (Mrs. J. H. Bowman)&#13;
Rt. 2. Box 281, Mount, Minn.&#13;
Mary Alice Holman. (Mrs. John&#13;
B. Swinney)&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Walter Johnson,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Waldo S . Johnston,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Idabelle Lewis, (Mrs. W. A.&#13;
Main), 253 Plymouth Drive&#13;
Pasadena&#13;
&#13;
6, California&#13;
&#13;
Alvah L. Miller&#13;
Brookfield. Conn.&#13;
Ethel R. Murray, Deceased&#13;
0. Walter Rest, 8215 So. Merrill&#13;
Ave., Chica go 17, Illinnois&#13;
Silas Rorem, 1453 Dorothy Drive&#13;
Glendale 2, California&#13;
Julia Royse, 2329 Hoyt St. ,&#13;
Muskegon Heights, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
Blanche M. Spratt,&#13;
1340 Morningside Ave.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Martha Swem, Deceas ed&#13;
Kath e rine Tackaberry&#13;
(Mrs. Will H . Orr) , Deceased&#13;
Ida Ullman&#13;
(Mrs. Edwin M. Brown)&#13;
De Leon Springs. Florida&#13;
Elsie Weary&#13;
(Mrs. Barne tt Farrell)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
May Welch, (Mrs. Moats)&#13;
509 N. Garfield,&#13;
Eagle Grove, Iowa&#13;
J. S. Wendell&#13;
17310 Wildemere St.,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
Clara E. Wolcott&#13;
Spirit Lake , Iowa&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
Eva Adams (Mrs. Eva Christy)&#13;
4516 Morningside Ave. ,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Emma Minerva Batcheller,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Maud neaton , Castana, Iowa&#13;
Chas. Alfred Beers&#13;
1014, Quarrier St.,&#13;
Charleston. W. Va.&#13;
Bard L eRoy Bevington, Unknown&#13;
Madge Bridenbaugh , (Mrs. Harry&#13;
Cox), 207 Artaban Apts.,&#13;
Long Beach, California&#13;
Cleveland Falsom Brooks&#13;
Platte, So. Dakota&#13;
Viola Croston. (Mrs . B. F. Held)&#13;
Hinton, Iowa&#13;
Dora Currier&#13;
(Mrs. Dora Holman)&#13;
R. R.. Hinton , Iowa&#13;
Agnes Ewer, (Mrs. C. A. Hunt)&#13;
11207 109th Lane No&#13;
Largo, Florida&#13;
Bertha Felber.&#13;
(Mrs. 0. F.&#13;
Petterson) , 503 N. Heathdale,&#13;
Covina, California&#13;
Claude A. Ferguson, Unknown&#13;
Logan A. Forkner. Unknown&#13;
Silas Forkner. Unknown&#13;
Maude Inez Fox&#13;
(Mrs. Ernest F. Goff)&#13;
Valier, Montana.&#13;
Matilda Frauen. (Mrs. Lionel&#13;
Stanley) ,&#13;
647 Elm&#13;
El Cerrito, California&#13;
Rena Mae Furley, Unknown&#13;
Gladys G. Garretson. (Mrs. B. J .&#13;
Hyink). 1229 N. Graynold&#13;
Glendale, California&#13;
Hattie Mae Gilbert,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Johanna Granning&#13;
(Mrs . U . S. Baxter).&#13;
- - Ryan. Iowa&#13;
Edward Greynold, Unknown&#13;
Luella Haakinson,&#13;
(Mrs. Frank&#13;
Pock). Unknown&#13;
Louise Hammond, (Mrs . Aylmer&#13;
Bushby).&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lura Hanna, (Mrs. Ward Hannah), Deceased&#13;
Leo C. Harrison, Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
Maude S. Haskell, (Mrs . George&#13;
Eveleth), Salix, Iowa&#13;
Ben Held, Hinton , Iowa&#13;
Nettie Fry Heiler, (Mrs. Fred&#13;
Seaver) ,&#13;
522 Halt Ave.,&#13;
Winter Park . Florida&#13;
Edw. Nelson Himmel, Unknown&#13;
Lonnie Jones, Deceased&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Kennicott&#13;
Hilton&#13;
Unknown&#13;
May Alice Malada, Unknown&#13;
Olive E . Mauger,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Myrtle E. Mercuere,&#13;
Mrs. Sm. L.&#13;
Smith) , Deceased&#13;
Fred W. Miller, U nknown&#13;
Le Onie May Nayler&#13;
(Mrs. Clarence Baynton),&#13;
2523 So. Main. Burlington, Ia.&#13;
Bridget O'Farrel,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Arthur Patton,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ida Mae Ping, Unknown&#13;
Walter Gregg Pitkin&#13;
Howe, Indiana&#13;
Marguerite Pittinger, (Mrs . L. B.&#13;
Iliff). Unknown&#13;
Elery L. Pratt, 1063 Montagne&#13;
Dunlap, Iowa&#13;
G. C. Saue r . Hartley, Iowa&#13;
Maude Estella Schaeffer&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ruby Frances Shambough&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Raymond E. Smith, Unknown&#13;
Mabel Snell , Unknown&#13;
David Livingston Soltan&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Theodore S. Soltan. Unknown&#13;
Oliver C. Terry, Unknown&#13;
Alfred Thornton, Unknown&#13;
Mike Tracy,&#13;
Bradford Hotel&#13;
Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
1910&#13;
Laurance J. Belt&#13;
Wheatland, Wyoming&#13;
Allen P. B e rkstresser, Deceased&#13;
J. H. Brid enbaugh, 1109 N. 32nd&#13;
St., Billings, Montana&#13;
Daisy Chamberlain, 330 So. 18th.&#13;
Lincoln, Nebraska&#13;
R. L. Chapman, Deecased&#13;
Grace Chase&#13;
(Mrs. A . G. Hinshaw)&#13;
Summerdale, Alabama&#13;
Evelyn Denkman,&#13;
(Mrs E . J.&#13;
Lester) , Armour, So. Dakota&#13;
Jessie William Doolittl e&#13;
326 W . Forest Ave.,&#13;
Wheaton, Illinois&#13;
George Eggleston .&#13;
805 W. 9th&#13;
St., Vinton , Iowa&#13;
Irvin A. Engle , 14 W. Central&#13;
Ave.. Los Ga tos . California&#13;
Hattie Gabri elson&#13;
(Mrs. H. Lidva ll)&#13;
1105 3 rd St., Boon e, Iowa&#13;
Nevada M. Hall&#13;
(Mrs. K enne t h Squires)&#13;
Colo. Iowa&#13;
Harry S. Hamilton , Deceased&#13;
Joseph E. Jeffrey&#13;
132 North St., Milford, Conn.&#13;
Ethel Johnson&#13;
Deceased&#13;
L. R. Keckle r , Deceased&#13;
Clara L. Lockin . (Mrs. Charles&#13;
Blankenship), Deceased&#13;
Elizabeth McConkey, Deceased&#13;
Me rton C. McConkey Deceased&#13;
Janet MacDonald&#13;
598 N. Main St..&#13;
Franklin . Indiana&#13;
Chas. E. Magoun, Deceased&#13;
L. T. Mitchell. 209 19th N. E. ,&#13;
Cedar Rapids Iowa&#13;
Harland L Mos sman Deceased&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Goodsell Pendell,&#13;
Orli e G. Prichard, 1432 Wilson.&#13;
Des Mo ines Iowa&#13;
Lilii e M. Rodine&#13;
(Mrs. S. F.&#13;
Holaday),&#13;
727 Merritt&#13;
St. ,&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORY&#13;
Webster City, I owa&#13;
Maude A. Rodine, (Mrs. C. H.&#13;
H a wbaker) ,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Grace Rorem, (Mrs. Douglas F ord&#13;
R obbins),&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Guy S. S tiles, 3819 Pet e rs Ave.,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Jessie F. Squires, (Mrs. Matthew&#13;
Schon).&#13;
Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
Lucile Warnock&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
S. 0 .&#13;
Ro rem) . 1453 Dorothy Drive&#13;
Gl endale, California&#13;
Sara Wolcott,&#13;
(Mrs. Frank&#13;
C.&#13;
Brown) ,&#13;
3521 56th.,&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
May Wood , (Mrs. Wm. Kixm ille r)&#13;
789 Michigan Ave.,&#13;
Willmette, Illi nois&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
J. B. Ackman,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Floyd W. Angenbaugh&#13;
Esmond, So. Da kota&#13;
Clinton D. Arms&#13;
614 B a ltimore. Waterloo, Iowa&#13;
Robert H. Ba ker , Oto, I owa&#13;
Iva n L. Ba rkley, Unknown&#13;
Mary Be kins, Unknown&#13;
Gertrude V. B ingha m, Unknown&#13;
Irwin Ray Bingham,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Maybelle Brown,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
George Byron Brush,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Edith Burton, (Mrs . R. C. Fulton),&#13;
Milford, Iowa&#13;
Ma r y Susan Clifford. Unknown&#13;
Howa rd T. Cobbs&#13;
Marathon, Iowa&#13;
Earl T. Corwin, U nknown&#13;
Ruth Dale, (Mrs . Loren Brown)&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Hattie E. Doebl e r, Unknown&#13;
Mary Feige, Unknown&#13;
Alfred D . Forkner, Unknown&#13;
John P. Fulkrod,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Roy Gellatly, Unknown&#13;
H omer B. Geyer, U nknown&#13;
Minnie M. Glanzman.&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Roy M. Gorde r , U nknown&#13;
H erbe rt Gray,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Lulu H askell&#13;
(Mrs.&#13;
Frank Taylor ), Unknown&#13;
James Fuller H askins .&#13;
1411 S.&#13;
Mulberry, Siou x City, Iowa&#13;
Maude H atter, Unknown&#13;
Mar y Frances Hayden, U nknown&#13;
Ina Alida H eeren.&#13;
315 W. 7th&#13;
S t ., Wayne, Nebraska&#13;
Jewell.&#13;
(Mrs. B . H.&#13;
Mabel&#13;
H a ynes ),&#13;
St. James Minn.&#13;
Nellie Kindig, Unknown&#13;
Chester C. King, Laurens, Iowa&#13;
Mary Lanyon, ( Mrs. William S.&#13;
Fry) .&#13;
211 W. Walnut,&#13;
San Diego 3 , California&#13;
Belle La rson . Unknown&#13;
Olive Larson,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Willia m Dwigh t Lela nd, Unknown&#13;
Edith May L ittell, Mrs. Arthur&#13;
Bottom) ,&#13;
903 45th ,&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
Doris Lukes, Unkn own&#13;
Gertrude Lukes, Unknown&#13;
Nell Mirandia McCallum,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Arilla Myrtie P hillips, Unknown&#13;
E . J . Plumme r. Marcus, I owa&#13;
Roy Winston Richards, Unknown&#13;
Anna My r tle Ricke r, Unknown&#13;
Jeanette Muriel Riddlesbarger&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Mabel E. Riedesell, U nknown&#13;
&#13;
50&#13;
&#13;
Edith&#13;
Rogers&#13;
(Mrs. H. A. Shoemaker)&#13;
1107 Walnut. Yankton, S. Da k.&#13;
E ls ie Ophelia Stevens, Unknown&#13;
Hazel Strickling, (Mrs. Bertra m&#13;
Ia.&#13;
Leonard),&#13;
Correctionville,&#13;
Harriet E . Torbet, U nknown&#13;
Cathe rine Ann Trieschman&#13;
Unknown&#13;
1911&#13;
Alice Lou ise Ande rson&#13;
(Mrs. J. 0 . McKinsey)&#13;
4000 Cathedral Avenue, N. W.&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
Lancelot S. Anderson, Deceased&#13;
Edward&#13;
Bachemeye r, Deceased&#13;
Bess Barnes. (Mrs. A. B. Bolte )&#13;
4 7 Groveland Terr ace&#13;
Minneapolis, Minnesota&#13;
Harriett Bass ,( Mrs. R. C. Helfenstein) , Deceased&#13;
J. Howard Be rkstresser&#13;
1710 Number 306 Makiki St. ,&#13;
Honolulu 14, Hawaii&#13;
Ivan Bloom . (Mrs. Byron Ben&#13;
Boyd ),&#13;
445 Arenas Street,&#13;
La Jolla, California&#13;
Ida A . Brown,&#13;
( Mrs . Clark R&#13;
1958 No. Main .&#13;
McClelland),&#13;
Fremont, Neb raska&#13;
Elizabeth Bruene, Deceased&#13;
F. H . Chandler,&#13;
Nielson Hotel,&#13;
Dennison, Iow a&#13;
Charles F. Cushma n ,&#13;
1124 Dupon t Bldg.,&#13;
Miami,&#13;
&#13;
Florida&#13;
&#13;
La ura Cushman&#13;
592 N. E . 60th S treet,&#13;
Miami,&#13;
&#13;
Florid a&#13;
&#13;
Edith M. Eicher,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Ni na Farnham, Deceased&#13;
Anne Goodchild , Deceased&#13;
N. L . Hackett, Deceased&#13;
H. C. Harpe r, Deceased&#13;
Victor J . Hays, Deceased&#13;
Frances Horn,&#13;
Nielson Hotel,&#13;
D en n ison , Iowa&#13;
H. H . H udson&#13;
Titusville, Florida&#13;
Eben S. Johnson, Deceased&#13;
Talma Kitchen,&#13;
Deceased&#13;
Dav id F. Loepp, Deceased&#13;
Ethel Lynch&#13;
25 A K endall Street.&#13;
Redlands,&#13;
Califo rnia&#13;
Etta Mahood, Deceased&#13;
Mabel McCrerry, (Mrs. A. O.&#13;
Becker ) .&#13;
Wadena, Minnesota&#13;
Vivia n McFa rla nd. (M.rs. R. J.&#13;
McGee) , 1650 Dayton A venue,&#13;
S t. Paul, Minnesota&#13;
Cora McKellip, (Mrs. Fred Sharman),&#13;
1931 Plamestron Pl.,&#13;
Hollywood , California&#13;
Arthur H. Meyer, Deceased&#13;
Jennie Nelson&#13;
(Mrs. J . H. Bridenba ugh )&#13;
1109 N. 22n d Street,&#13;
Billings, Mon tana&#13;
Edna E. Randolph,&#13;
1723 Ross&#13;
Street,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Laura&#13;
Shumway, (Mrs. L. T.&#13;
Mitchell ), 209 19t h N. E .,&#13;
Cedar Rapids, Iowa&#13;
Pearl Snyder&#13;
(Mrs. H. Van Gorde r )&#13;
3123 49 Avenue Nor t h&#13;
St. Petersburg, Florida&#13;
Mar y Thoburn&#13;
(Mrs. Harr y West)&#13;
&#13;
Bay Minette, Alaba ma&#13;
H . T rimble, Deceased&#13;
W. W. Waymack, Deceased&#13;
R u t h Wa lle meyer&#13;
(Mrs. Clarence Melcher)&#13;
3657 Sawtelle Bl vd.&#13;
Los Angeles, Calif ornia&#13;
Lola Westcott,&#13;
819 No. 17th ,&#13;
Boise, Ida h o&#13;
Maria Wiese, Hull, Iowa&#13;
EX STUDENTS&#13;
He rbert Leroy Bilsborough&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Alice E dit h Blake, U nknown&#13;
Francis Edward Bleakley&#13;
205 1/2W. 6th Street,&#13;
Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
Edna L ucille Boulden, Unknown&#13;
Albe r t B oysen, Unknown&#13;
Ernest Boysen,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Elmer Preston Bradshaw&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Sylvia Annette Bradshaw&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Helen Brown&#13;
(Mrs. W. P. Stephen son )&#13;
192 R avensw ood .&#13;
Menlo Park. California&#13;
Ulysses Be r yne Collins . Deceased&#13;
N ina Mae Clark&#13;
.&#13;
(Mrs Nina Mae Notestine)&#13;
c/o Houstons Nursing Home&#13;
Humboldt, Iowa&#13;
Harold James Currier . U nknown&#13;
Albe r t H. Digerness, Unknown&#13;
Bertha Mae Eads,&#13;
Mrs . Floyd&#13;
Opwick ).&#13;
Unk nown&#13;
Howard Erickson,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
R obert B urton Fearing, Unknow n&#13;
Florence Ethel Fletcher&#13;
(Mrs. G. B . K in ney)&#13;
Ocheyedon . Iowa&#13;
.&#13;
EthelynEdna Fosburg, Unknown&#13;
Lewis Fry,&#13;
2600 Calvert,&#13;
Lincoln 2. Nebraska&#13;
Harley Hayes Gill , 608 Flood&#13;
Bldg. .. San Francisco, California&#13;
Ruth Alice Goodrich,&#13;
Unknow n&#13;
F lore nce Maude Gorder, U nknown&#13;
Mary Graham, Brainard, Minn.&#13;
Hiram Gay Albee, U nknown&#13;
Minnie Au gusta Bar tel. Unknown&#13;
Phoebe Benbow,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Leonora Frede rica Granzow&#13;
(Mrs. Wilson )&#13;
4442 D awson Avenue,&#13;
San Diego, California&#13;
Mariee Grootes&#13;
(Mrs. B loem ) ,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Anbrey Chester Grubb, Unknown&#13;
Lillia n Lucretia H amomnd&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Lloyd Herbert Hamren, Unknown&#13;
Paulina Louise Hanner&#13;
(Mrs. Ora G. Smi t h )&#13;
Rt. 2. Hornick, I owa&#13;
Cvrus Hansen, U nknown&#13;
Walter Bennett Hay, Unknown&#13;
Genevieve Hinde,&#13;
304 N. E . 23rd&#13;
Street, Miami, Florida&#13;
Helen Josephone Holman&#13;
(Mrs. Harry Schott)&#13;
Los Angeles, Cal ifornia&#13;
L loyd W. Johnson&#13;
1021 l st Avenue S. E ,&#13;
LeMars, Iowa&#13;
Ira Andre Jones,&#13;
U nknown&#13;
Fabius Clarke Lavender&#13;
Eagle Butte, Sou th Da kota&#13;
Box 293&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORY&#13;
Paul Wesley McElwain, Unknown&#13;
Dean Paul McKaig, Unknown&#13;
Edith Mead, Unknown&#13;
Hugh H . Mille r, Mapleton, Iowa&#13;
Thomas Molesworth, Unknown&#13;
Ray Douglas Robbins&#13;
Clear L a ke, Iowa&#13;
Elsie Sophia Rodine, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
Clyde Rogers,&#13;
15 Furney St.,&#13;
Wenatchee, Washington&#13;
Raymond Willard Rogers&#13;
1624 Elmhurst&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Edna Schmidt,&#13;
Unknown&#13;
Ulrich Senn,&#13;
411 East Mason&#13;
Milwaukee 2, Wisconsin,&#13;
Annie Adeline Shedd, Unknown&#13;
&#13;
Birdie Bea Smith, Unknown&#13;
Charles Garnet Trimble, Unknown&#13;
Bessie A. Wenbourne&#13;
Meckling, South Dakota&#13;
Emma Zimmerman&#13;
426 Sherman Avenue&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDER&#13;
A. W . Buckingham ----- Public R elations&#13;
Louis Croston -------- - - ----- -- -- Editor&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Sioux City, Iowa as&#13;
Second Class Matter under Act of Congress, August&#13;
&#13;
24, 1912. Published four times a year in September,&#13;
December, March and June by Morningside college,&#13;
Sioux City 6. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Prospective Morningsiders&#13;
If you know of a young man or woman who is the kind of&#13;
perso n you would want to attend Morn ings ide, please fill out this&#13;
form an d mail to the alumni office.&#13;
&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
&#13;
Exch.&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
State&#13;
&#13;
High School&#13;
Graduation Date&#13;
Major Field of Interest&#13;
&#13;
Month&#13;
&#13;
Year _____&#13;
&#13;
No.</text>
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                <text>Morningsider: Volume 20, Number 02 (1961-12)</text>
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                <text>Morningsider College: Creator</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="26412">
                <text>Buckingham, A. W.: Public Relations</text>
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                <text>Croston, Louis: Editor</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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                <text>Archives (3rd Floor)</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>The Morningsider was a monthly newsletter that Morningside College sent to Alumni to keep them informed about what was happening on campus and in the lives of other alumni. The Morningsider Volume 20, Number 02 was published for the month of December in 1961.&#13;
&#13;
This issue is torn along the binding.</text>
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                <text>The President's Pen- pg. 2&#13;
On the Cover- pg. 2&#13;
The Morningsider- pg. 2&#13;
Beauty and Charm Reign at Homecoming- pg. 3&#13;
Morningside College Alumni Association Officers and Board Homecoming 1961 to Homecoming 1962- pg. 4&#13;
Alumni Officers- pg. 4&#13;
Executive Committee- pg. 4&#13;
Alumni Trustee- pg. 4&#13;
"M" Club- pg. 5&#13;
Homecoming 1961- pg. 6&#13;
New International House- pg. 7&#13;
International House Opens- pg. 7&#13;
Article By Professor Eidsmoe in Isea Midland Schools and Johper- pg. 9&#13;
Parents on Campus, Dec. 2- pg. 9&#13;
1961 Football Season Highlights- pg. 10&#13;
Basketball Season- pg. 11&#13;
Heiman Van Dyke Honored In Hall of Fame- pg. 11&#13;
James Juvenal Hayes Dies in Pennsylvania- pg. 12&#13;
Morningside Participates In Three Speech Tourneys- pg. 12&#13;
Professor and Family Study, Tour Europe- pg. 13&#13;
3100 Musicians on Campus for Band Day- pg. 13&#13;
Morningside Faculty Piano Team Plays at Yankton- pg. 13&#13;
Shaw's "Arms and the Man" Sponsored By Morningside- pg. 13&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Gives Jazz Concert- pg. 13&#13;
Poet Editor Speaks At Morningside- pg. 13&#13;
Foreign Film Series By Student Council- pg. 14&#13;
Fall Enrollment Figures- pg. 14&#13;
Counseling Representative On Campus- pg. 14&#13;
Kucinski Guest Conductor at Fredonia, N. Y. Concert- pg. 14&#13;
Chemical Society Meets At Morningside- pg. 14&#13;
20th Annual Superintendent's Conference Held- pg. 15&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Receives Province VI Award- pg. 15&#13;
New Faculty- pg. 15&#13;
Religious Groups Hold Retreats- pg. 15&#13;
Conduct European Tour- pg. 15&#13;
Footing The Bill- pg. 16-17&#13;
Gift From Insurance Firm Recognizes Morningside's Contribution To Industry- pg. 18&#13;
Music Department Presents Combined Concert- pg. 18&#13;
Dr. Bauer Honored- pg. 18&#13;
Faculty-Student Reception Held- pg. 18&#13;
Alumni Recognized For Service- pg. 19&#13;
'16 Grad Lauded In Dallas- pg. 19&#13;
Re-Elected To Des Moines Board of Education- pg. 19-20&#13;
Verl Crow '34 Cover Subject of Magazine- pg. 20&#13;
Francis Kingsbury Honored- pg. 20&#13;
Charlotte Ressegieu Resigns After Long Service- pg. 20&#13;
Language Laboratory To Be Installed- pg. 21&#13;
Leon Hickman On Panel At Columbia- pg. 21&#13;
Morningside Alumnus Part Of Music Program In Omaha Schools- pg. 21&#13;
New York- pg. 22&#13;
Washington- pg. 23&#13;
Grammer Girl Reunion- pg. 23&#13;
Des Moines- pg. 24&#13;
Philadelphia- pg. 26&#13;
Omaha- pg. 26&#13;
Florida- pg. 26&#13;
Minneapolis- pg. 27&#13;
Morningside Authors- pg. 28-29&#13;
Longhorns Bring Culture- pg. 28&#13;
New Horizons For Management- pg. 28-29&#13;
The Legacy For Hiroshima- pg. 29&#13;
Manual For Law Stenographers- pg. 29&#13;
Adelia MacBeth Retires- pg. 29&#13;
Alumni Give $54,386 In Fund Year Ending July 31, 1961- pg. 30&#13;
Living Endow. Starts 21st Year- pg. 30&#13;
Class Of 1915 First In Participation- pg. 30&#13;
Class Of 1911 In 2nd Place- pg. 30&#13;
Participation By Classes- pg. 31&#13;
Participation By States- pg. 31&#13;
Living Endowment- pg. 32&#13;
Average Living Endowment Gift Is $13.18- pg. 32&#13;
Alumni Give $54,386.25 In Year Ending July 31- pg. 32&#13;
Abby Easter Seal Chairman- pg. 32&#13;
Stan Greigg Elected To City Council- pg. 32&#13;
Living Endowment- pg. 33-37&#13;
Alumni Represent College At Inaugrals- pg. 38&#13;
Morningsider Working On Moon Craft- pg. 38&#13;
"Grandma" Of The Nursery- pg. 38&#13;
Rev. Jack D. Eales To New York Church- pg. 38&#13;
In Memoriam- pg. 39-40&#13;
"Wee Morningsiders"- pg. 40-41&#13;
Weddings- pg. 41&#13;
Class Notes- pg. 41-45&#13;
Will He Keep Or Hand Off?- pg. 45&#13;
Directory- pg. 46-51&#13;
Prospective Morningsiders- pg. 52</text>
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THIRTY-THIRD ANNUAL&#13;
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GRACE METHODIST CHURCH&#13;
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Ethel Hedenbergh, Mezzo Soprano&#13;
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Virginia Kroening, Organ&#13;
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Miss Gustafson&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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Piano Recital&#13;
EDNA GUNNAR PETERSON&#13;
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June&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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Clara Klath&#13;
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Antje Van Donselaar&#13;
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&#13;
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Closing Concert&#13;
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Emma Victoria Hough&#13;
Ruth Eva French&#13;
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Guitar&#13;
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&#13;
Mandolin&#13;
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&#13;
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Irene Adel Chapin&#13;
Lulu Wiemer Calhoun&#13;
Ruth Bly Brown&#13;
Flora Searls&#13;
Esther Leone Macfarlane&#13;
Emma Victoria Hough&#13;
Ruth Eva French&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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Josephine Vivian Weisz&#13;
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&#13;
Guitar&#13;
Vema Marguerite Comoli&#13;
&#13;
Mandolin&#13;
William A. Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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Esther Leone MacFarlane&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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                    <text>Morningside College  Conservatory of Music&#13;
Closing Concert  &#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Commencement Exercises&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
Monday Evening&#13;
&#13;
Chapel&#13;
&#13;
June 9, 1913&#13;
&#13;
�Program&#13;
1.&#13;
&#13;
PART I.&#13;
La Regatta Veneziana&#13;
Two pianos&#13;
Misses Ada Walin, Jeanette Wolcott,&#13;
Merlin Sawyer, Margaret Poppen.&#13;
&#13;
Liszt:&#13;
&#13;
2. De Berlot: Seventh Air Varle .. Violin&#13;
Miss Myrtle Wadhams&#13;
3. Chopin:&#13;
&#13;
Grieg:&#13;
&#13;
Prelude In B minor&#13;
Scherzo In E minor&#13;
Miss Mabel Trenary.&#13;
&#13;
Plano&#13;
&#13;
4. MacDowell:&#13;
&#13;
Impromptu Piano&#13;
Chaminade: Gavotte &#13;
Miss Anna Richards.&#13;
&#13;
5. Ronald:&#13;
&#13;
Daybreak and Night&#13;
(From the Summertime Cycle)&#13;
Vocal&#13;
Miss Minnie Crafts.&#13;
&#13;
6.&#13;
&#13;
Gade: Album Leaf, E major Plano&#13;
D'Albert: Gavotte and Musette.&#13;
Miss Elsie Lang.&#13;
&#13;
7. De Beriot: Scenes de Ballet&#13;
Mr. Harry Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Violin&#13;
&#13;
The Pianos used by the Conservatory are furnished&#13;
&#13;
�PART II.&#13;
Don Juan Overture&#13;
Two pianos&#13;
Miss Lila Woodford.&#13;
Miss Faith Woodford.&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
&#13;
Mozart:&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
James Reistrup: Prelude B flat&#13;
minor&#13;
Piano&#13;
Sibelius: Romance D flat&#13;
Miss Irene Chapin.&#13;
&#13;
3.&#13;
&#13;
Bemberg: Nymphs and Fauns Vocal&#13;
Miss Josephine Welsz&#13;
&#13;
4.&#13;
&#13;
Chopin: Prelude In E minor&#13;
Schubert-Lizst:&#13;
" Du Bist Die&#13;
Ruh"&#13;
Miss Frankie Knight.&#13;
&#13;
5.&#13;
&#13;
Schumann: Valse Noble&#13;
Piano&#13;
Strelezki : Mazurka in A minor .&#13;
Miss Flora Searls.&#13;
&#13;
6.&#13;
&#13;
De Berlot: Concerto in G major,&#13;
first movement&#13;
Violin&#13;
Miss Grace White.&#13;
&#13;
7. Schumann: Four numbers from"Carneval"&#13;
Piano&#13;
Preambule.&#13;
Reconnaissance.&#13;
Pause.&#13;
Marche des Davidsbundler.&#13;
Miss Luella Haskins.&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas and Certificates&#13;
&#13;
the Piano Department of Messrs. Davidson Bros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
�Class of 1913&#13;
Graduates&#13;
&#13;
in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Luella Lucile Haskins&#13;
Frankie Phelps Knight&#13;
Elsie Ella Lang&#13;
Anna Ellen Richards&#13;
Mabel Leona Trenary&#13;
&#13;
Graduate&#13;
&#13;
in Voice&#13;
&#13;
Josephine Vivian Weisz&#13;
&#13;
Certificates&#13;
&#13;
in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Mina Dunning&#13;
Ruth Eva French&#13;
Gertrude Lela Mosier&#13;
Flora Searls&#13;
Alice Caroline Thornburg&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory of Music will hold a&#13;
Summer Six Weeks Session, beginning&#13;
Monday June 16. Special work in Piano,&#13;
Voice, Violin, Banjo, Mandolin and Guitar&#13;
will be offered; also classes in Harmony&#13;
History of Music and General Musical&#13;
Knowledge and Appreciation and&#13;
six recitals. The tuition rates will be&#13;
exceptionally low. Special circular on&#13;
application.</text>
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              <text>Morningside College  Conservatory of Music&#13;
Closing Concert  &#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Commencement Exercises&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
Monday Evening&#13;
&#13;
Chapel&#13;
&#13;
June 9, 1913&#13;
&#13;
Program&#13;
1.&#13;
&#13;
PART I.&#13;
La Regatta Veneziana&#13;
Two pianos&#13;
Misses Ada Walin, Jeanette Wolcott,&#13;
Merlin Sawyer, Margaret Poppen.&#13;
&#13;
Liszt:&#13;
&#13;
2. De Berlot: Seventh Air Varle .. Violin&#13;
Miss Myrtle Wadhams&#13;
3. Chopin:&#13;
&#13;
Grieg:&#13;
&#13;
Prelude In B minor&#13;
Scherzo In E minor&#13;
Miss Mabel Trenary.&#13;
&#13;
Plano&#13;
&#13;
4. MacDowell:&#13;
&#13;
Impromptu Piano&#13;
Chaminade: Gavotte &#13;
Miss Anna Richards.&#13;
&#13;
5. Ronald:&#13;
&#13;
Daybreak and Night&#13;
(From the Summertime Cycle)&#13;
Vocal&#13;
Miss Minnie Crafts.&#13;
&#13;
6.&#13;
&#13;
Gade: Album Leaf, E major Plano&#13;
D'Albert: Gavotte and Musette.&#13;
Miss Elsie Lang.&#13;
&#13;
7. De Beriot: Scenes de Ballet&#13;
Mr. Harry Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Violin&#13;
&#13;
The Pianos used by the Conservatory are furnished&#13;
&#13;
PART II.&#13;
Don Juan Overture&#13;
Two pianos&#13;
Miss Lila Woodford.&#13;
Miss Faith Woodford.&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
&#13;
Mozart:&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
James Reistrup: Prelude B flat&#13;
minor&#13;
Piano&#13;
Sibelius: Romance D flat&#13;
Miss Irene Chapin.&#13;
&#13;
3.&#13;
&#13;
Bemberg: Nymphs and Fauns Vocal&#13;
Miss Josephine Welsz&#13;
&#13;
4.&#13;
&#13;
Chopin: Prelude In E minor&#13;
Schubert-Lizst:&#13;
" Du Bist Die&#13;
Ruh"&#13;
Miss Frankie Knight.&#13;
&#13;
5.&#13;
&#13;
Schumann: Valse Noble&#13;
Piano&#13;
Strelezki : Mazurka in A minor .&#13;
Miss Flora Searls.&#13;
&#13;
6.&#13;
&#13;
De Berlot: Concerto in G major,&#13;
first movement&#13;
Violin&#13;
Miss Grace White.&#13;
&#13;
7. Schumann: Four numbers from"Carneval"&#13;
Piano&#13;
Preambule.&#13;
Reconnaissance.&#13;
Pause.&#13;
Marche des Davidsbundler.&#13;
Miss Luella Haskins.&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas and Certificates&#13;
&#13;
the Piano Department of Messrs. Davidson Bros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1913&#13;
Graduates&#13;
&#13;
in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Luella Lucile Haskins&#13;
Frankie Phelps Knight&#13;
Elsie Ella Lang&#13;
Anna Ellen Richards&#13;
Mabel Leona Trenary&#13;
&#13;
Graduate&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Josephine Vivian Weisz&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
Mina Dunning&#13;
Ruth Eva French&#13;
Gertrude Lela Mosier&#13;
Flora Searls&#13;
Alice Caroline Thornburg&#13;
&#13;
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Summer Six Weeks Session, beginning&#13;
Monday June 16. Special work in Piano,&#13;
Voice, Violin, Banjo, Mandolin and Guitar&#13;
will be offered; also classes in Harmony&#13;
History of Music and General Musical&#13;
Knowledge and Appreciation and&#13;
six recitals. The tuition rates will be&#13;
exceptionally low. Special circular on&#13;
application.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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Graduating Song Recital&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
Ivy&#13;
&#13;
Fullbrook&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
The Year's at the Spring&#13;
The Almond Tree&#13;
Moonlight&#13;
Morning Hymn&#13;
Springtime&#13;
&#13;
MRS. BEECH&#13;
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Henschel&#13;
STERN&#13;
&#13;
Menuetto in B Minor&#13;
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&#13;
Schubert&#13;
Grieg&#13;
&#13;
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Spirit Flower&#13;
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&#13;
Tosti&#13;
MEYERBEER&#13;
&#13;
LEHMANN&#13;
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Tipton-Campbel&#13;
DUDLEY BucK&#13;
RACHMANINOFF&#13;
&#13;
Daybreak&#13;
RONALD&#13;
Night&#13;
RONALD&#13;
My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice (Samson and Delilah)&#13;
Saint Saens&#13;
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Commencement Program&#13;
College Auditorium, Tuesday Evening, June Twelfth&#13;
At eight-fifteen o'clock&#13;
&#13;
�Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1906.&#13;
&#13;
SARAH D. GILMON ,&#13;
PEARL S. MASON,&#13;
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MABEL E. WILLIAMS,&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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Commencement Program&#13;
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At eight-fifteen o'clock&#13;
&#13;
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SARAH D. GILMON ,&#13;
PEARL S. MASON,&#13;
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VERA FERN RITZ.&#13;
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Miss Mossman&#13;
At Evening,&#13;
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Ballade from the "Flying Dutchman,"&#13;
&#13;
Wagner Bendel&#13;
Miss Gilmon&#13;
For All Eternity,&#13;
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Miss Smylie&#13;
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Mendelssohn&#13;
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Miss Ritz&#13;
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Arditi&#13;
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Awarding of Diplomas,&#13;
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&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
PIANO RECITAL&#13;
-BY-&#13;
&#13;
Pearl s. Mason&#13;
-ASSISTED BY Male Quartet&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
AUDITORIUM. MAY 9TH.&#13;
&#13;
Program.&#13;
Sonata in E flat&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Sweet Genevieve,&#13;
Tucker-Nessler&#13;
&#13;
Elegie in A flat,&#13;
Huber&#13;
Serenade,&#13;
Liebling&#13;
"A Wedding Procession in Troldhaugen, ''&#13;
Kammenoi Ostrow,&#13;
In Absence,&#13;
Concerto in F sharp major,&#13;
Andante. Allegro.&#13;
&#13;
Grieg&#13;
Rubenstein&#13;
Buck&#13;
Hiller&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
PIANO RECITAL&#13;
-BY-&#13;
&#13;
mabel E. Williams&#13;
-ASSISTED BY LADIES' QUARTET,&#13;
COLLEGE AUDITORIUM, MAY&#13;
&#13;
28TH,&#13;
&#13;
Program.&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
&#13;
Sonata Pathetique.&#13;
&#13;
Steele&#13;
&#13;
The Bridge.&#13;
Nocturne Op. 9, No.&#13;
To a Meadow Brook.&#13;
To a Water Lily.&#13;
Rondo Capriccioso.&#13;
Spring Song.&#13;
Concertstuck,&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
Chopin&#13;
McDowell&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Mendelssohn · Root&#13;
Weber&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
PIANO RECITAL&#13;
-BY- -&#13;
&#13;
Vera Fern Ritz&#13;
-ASSISTED BY HELEN RITZ,&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
SOPRANO,&#13;
&#13;
AUDITORIUM.&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Program.&#13;
Sonata No. 3,&#13;
Adagio-Finale.&#13;
Snowflakes,&#13;
Venezia Gondolied&#13;
Ballade in A flat,&#13;
Rosemonde,&#13;
&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Cowen&#13;
Liszt&#13;
Chopin&#13;
Chaminade&#13;
&#13;
Concerto in D minor,&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Andante and Finale.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
PIANO RECITAL&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
Sarah D. Gilmon&#13;
-ASSISTED BY LADIES' CHORUS.&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
AUDITORIUM•&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
1ST.&#13;
&#13;
Program.&#13;
Sonata Op. 31. No. 3.&#13;
Allegro&#13;
&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
&#13;
Love's Old Sweet Song.&#13;
&#13;
Molle Steele&#13;
&#13;
On The Holy Mount.&#13;
&#13;
Dvorak&#13;
St. Heller&#13;
Godard&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
&#13;
Rondino Brillante.&#13;
At the Spinning Wheel.&#13;
Lift Thine Eyes (Elijah).&#13;
&#13;
Ballade from the Flying Dutchman .&#13;
&#13;
Wagner Liszt&#13;
&#13;
( Arranged for two pianos.)&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE College&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
PIANO RECITAL&#13;
-BY--&#13;
&#13;
Nina V. Mossman&#13;
-ASSISTED BY MABEL SMYLIE, SOPRANO,&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
AUDITORIUM,&#13;
&#13;
JUNE&#13;
&#13;
7,&#13;
&#13;
Program.&#13;
Mozart&#13;
&#13;
Romanze in A flat,&#13;
&#13;
Nevin&#13;
&#13;
T'was April,&#13;
&#13;
Schubert&#13;
&#13;
Impromptu, Op. 90,&#13;
Morceau Characteristique No.&#13;
&#13;
1,&#13;
&#13;
Waltz in A flat, Op. 34, No.&#13;
&#13;
Wollenhaupt&#13;
Chopin&#13;
&#13;
A Song of Sunshine,&#13;
&#13;
1,&#13;
&#13;
Thomas&#13;
&#13;
Concerto in E flat Maj., Op. 93, Beethoven&#13;
Rondo.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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Nineteen hundred twelve&#13;
Eight fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�Graduates&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
Laura Lucile Belt&#13;
Gladys Nelle Cord&#13;
&#13;
Organ&#13;
Anna Marion Stevens&#13;
&#13;
Voice&#13;
Ivy fullbrook&#13;
Gladys Truesdell&#13;
&#13;
Certificate Class&#13;
Clara Donley&#13;
Floy Marie Gifford&#13;
Emma Victoria Hough&#13;
Laura Marie Postin&#13;
Anna Marion Stevens&#13;
&#13;
�Program&#13;
RECITAL by ESTHER MAY PLUMB, Contralto&#13;
&#13;
Aria-from "The Light of the World"&#13;
Belshazzar&#13;
The Soldier's Bride&#13;
The Loreley&#13;
&#13;
Sullivan&#13;
Schumann&#13;
Schumann&#13;
Liszt&#13;
&#13;
Aria-"Ah Mon fils" (Le Prophete)&#13;
Ich Trage Meine Minne&#13;
Im Kahne&#13;
Bolero&#13;
&#13;
Meyerbeer&#13;
Strauss&#13;
Grieg&#13;
Arditi&#13;
&#13;
How's my Boy&#13;
A Roundelay&#13;
Pleading&#13;
No One Saw at All &#13;
Loewe&#13;
Homer&#13;
Lidgey&#13;
Elgar&#13;
&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas and Certificates President Craig&#13;
Woodland Croon Song&#13;
Soft-footed Snow&#13;
Mammy's Song&#13;
Over the Desert&#13;
&#13;
Clutsam&#13;
Sigurd Lie&#13;
Ware&#13;
Kellie&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>Conservatory of Music&#13;
Commencement Exercises&#13;
Grace Methodist Episcopal Church&#13;
&#13;
Monday Evening&#13;
June the tenth&#13;
Nineteen hundred twelve&#13;
Eight fifteen&#13;
&#13;
Graduates&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
Laura Lucile Belt&#13;
Gladys Nelle Cord&#13;
&#13;
Organ&#13;
Anna Marion Stevens&#13;
&#13;
Voice&#13;
Ivy fullbrook&#13;
Gladys Truesdell&#13;
&#13;
Certificate Class&#13;
Clara Donley&#13;
Floy Marie Gifford&#13;
Emma Victoria Hough&#13;
Laura Marie Postin&#13;
Anna Marion Stevens&#13;
&#13;
Program&#13;
RECITAL by ESTHER MAY PLUMB, Contralto&#13;
&#13;
Aria-from "The Light of the World"&#13;
Belshazzar&#13;
The Soldier's Bride&#13;
The Loreley&#13;
&#13;
Sullivan&#13;
Schumann&#13;
Schumann&#13;
Liszt&#13;
&#13;
Aria-"Ah Mon fils" (Le Prophete)&#13;
Ich Trage Meine Minne&#13;
Im Kahne&#13;
Bolero&#13;
&#13;
Meyerbeer&#13;
Strauss&#13;
Grieg&#13;
Arditi&#13;
&#13;
How's my Boy&#13;
A Roundelay&#13;
Pleading&#13;
No One Saw at All &#13;
Loewe&#13;
Homer&#13;
Lidgey&#13;
Elgar&#13;
&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas and Certificates President Craig&#13;
Woodland Croon Song&#13;
Soft-footed Snow&#13;
Mammy's Song&#13;
Over the Desert&#13;
&#13;
Clutsam&#13;
Sigurd Lie&#13;
Ware&#13;
Kellie&#13;
&#13;
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Conservatory of Music&#13;
J . W. MATHER. Director&#13;
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Commencement Concert&#13;
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College Auditorium, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Tuesday,&#13;
&#13;
June 13, 1905, at 8:15 P.M.&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
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Olivia Meyer&#13;
&#13;
Ida Adella Bryan&#13;
Ada Gertrude Hart&#13;
Charles Oliver Hargrave&#13;
Charles Edward Keller&#13;
Grace Lucile Peck&#13;
Lillian Agnes Shumaker&#13;
Ella Adelheid Toenjes&#13;
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Romanza&#13;
&#13;
Louis Gregh&#13;
&#13;
A Persian March&#13;
&#13;
Joh. Strauss&#13;
CONSERVATORY ORCHESTRA&#13;
&#13;
Piano- Concerto in C Maj.&#13;
&#13;
Mozart&#13;
&#13;
MR. CHAS. KELLER&#13;
&#13;
Piano- March&#13;
&#13;
Schubert-Tausig&#13;
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Vocal- '' Sunset"&#13;
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