Skip to main content

Full text of "Shimer College Record Vol. XLIII No. 1"

See other formats


SHINER COLLEGE RECORD 



\lumni News 







::\; a 



January, 1951 



Volume 43, No. 1 



1 


Slumsr CotUf* 1 <"'"' 


' 





The Living Endowmeni • 



r 



' 



* . •. ' ' * ■ 



v ::::::. . v - - p>^ *«****< ****** —^r,.,- ,r, ,» 



f .- 



imcr 



■ 

flKHXfat wa4 



#*•*! j rjr ra r j. 



« fe*fcf ar. : 

dtadoti b? jr- ttrtaide bou 
La// 

'/r>arrf by : 
,*tf tttMpug dbt 

H 



■f BUM 



JmIi.i Steven I rain injected l<> Shirrn Hoard 










t>i 



h 



- 



1«JI !A *,H /PM VVf-tft 



(< 



I 









■ 






' 




t 






















to %' 



















1 . 

■ 












' 









■•■••' 



;— 









News Notes . • ■ 

bich th.s 

all bt 
present 

urd* niOg *»* 

humanities a 

in the 

pen house in the dormin 

surr 

shov nnasittii P*«« 

held in 

3ar: 
tfc 

lV nooa m the college din 
Dean John H Russ 

numb 

otest CD se the >n 

v ho kx 

lad her son b 

I ; B 

spent t: l>er ""6 ""' v * " ". 

pus and coo! following candle-light din- 

in an A!u - lv evenings. Entertain- 

! on these ->ns by 

: the- music or dramatics de- 
ment. In mber Arnold Bern- 
; nna tenor, gave a recital, fol- 
Uroup singing under his leader- 

• T - ^ con- 

\ number of high scho S scheduled lor this year 

John Clark Kimball ol the 
rn Iowa high schoo JO Council o; ago Relations 

6. The second event in the 
ncert November 15 by 
Harold Stark, tenor, and S\- 
>imms, pianist, both of the music 
I the I 
uj 



should 

; n 
h ." 

summarized by th< 

Brumbaugh at that 
inference. The nsitoi 
ncla, 
buildings. 
U b pigged 
ntt mber d projn 
chis Ml, -odudms 
,-Ik dub presented .« , 
n DeO 
naas pageant 

i 

International 

xhibirion. 

• The Athletic Association, win 
mbership in past years consisted of 

l0 w lists boys on Its roster. 1 he 
sponsoring mens bas- 
ire scheduled 
Lic-of-town collegi 

• us campus clubs thi 

ving after-dinner coffee in 



m 

the 11th, 
The 

a in • 

. in the !. 






Miss Tkoreen Completes 25 Years at Ski 



mer 



(j')/- tu oi vou who receive this . 
• of the Alumni News will Fail to 
.gnize the picture of Miss Tho 
on the front cover. Vou have known her 
as instructor of French or German, 
bead of Hathawaj or West Hall, as An 
admissions counsellor. Others have 
known her lor twenty live years as an 
rive worker in rh, Baptist Church 
in Mr. Carroll, as a member ol Phi 
Kappa Phi and Delta Kappa Gamma, 
national scholastic and education honor- 
ary societies, and more recently as a 
member of the P.E.O. chapter at Mt. 
Carroll, of which she is treasurer. 

Miss Thorcen's town is Galcshurg, 
Illinois, where she was graduated from 
Lombard College in ION. After teach- 
ing in Iowa she received her masters 
degree at the University of Illinois in 
1911 She has since then done graduate 
work at various Univcrsitu die 

United States, Canada and Europ 

Miss Thorecn believes in young 
people. "More than once," she has said, 

I have felt that I have learned m 
from my young ladies than they h 
from me. At least my pupils have in- 
spired me to grow older .is slowly as 
possible in spite of the speed of d. 
impatient years." 

She finds the young people of today 
have more poise than they did when 
She started her teaching career, but that 
they also feel that whatever they do 
right— they feel they have the' ability 
to judge and thus rely less on their el- 
ders for what is the right path. She 

r S, Some of this is due to n 
dent council form of discipline, but the 
pendulum swings back and when the 
e comes that it goes too far in the 

routh freedom, then we will 

probably have a reversal." 

Miss Thorecn finds her work as an 
admissions counsellor illy inter- 

esting. Sh< h interests me I 

1 like people who are D g ( | K 

educational offering! Colleges and 



trying to keep up with th 
cations their offspring choose to 
from week to week. 

ihaps the only virtue I cm I 
Miss Thorecn, Is that of 'staying 
P ut > an ' light question thai 

complimentary - tying put' how 
is a valuable asset to 

I'horeen emph rds, the 

traditions and the education Is of 

Shinier and is remembered 1 
students for her high ideals,' her kind- 
ness ami her good humor. 



Alumni Dues Paid for L95CV51 
Dues paid after Jul) ! 

Emma DbVoe Biggi b 
Virginia Crogh \n 

AKI Wool) D 

Julia Loveless Fi< m 

Lav 11 

Patricia Grubbs 
Dana Wilcox H 
Lucy Dell \ 

A. 

M \m 

■(11 

Vi \< K 
SOHN 

HI Ml! 

Betty Tayloh 

ma \\ ATSON \\ . 
BY WORN 

through th aent 

of your alumm dues ol Q t i l>u Wt . 

publish m^{ improve tins 
ou have noi paid yours for I 

till out the blank on the last | day 

and m.ul to A. Mali Hostctter, Alumni 

Ofii imer colk 



I, which this 

. • \ ••••■■■■ ' ' 
Sofllbutave. 

dents were pn 
urdav morning with . - 
workshop D 
humanities and 
scene were held in tru 

op* ********** 

v 

supper, th. »_^2 

Day church services we« held m h 

Bapdst Church, with R 

Eckert Of Vorkv.lle. fadier of or. 

rhe students, as tl "fjS^ 

Dinne. 

dav uoon in the college dinw 
«, John H. B 

J Brumbauiih as rfu r. Mus 

numbe. 

tfae entertainment 

au.iuer who looked most ail 
this vear 
Indianapolis and her son B 

• R f teen alumnae and former stud 

Ot the nber U 

j 12 on the campus and Mt 

in an Alum-Varsity ho. *- 
rternoon. the I lth, which 

luncheon in th 

md Mrs. Russel. 

of hi: 
s from northu 

II; 

mvirarion it 

umbftug 1 topk 

was hools 

of this r 



m Dr Brumbaugh « that am 

The < 
dressed A nJ m , 

„ annual Christm* |»g«' 

. Z* and Saddle Club traveled by 

,ber 2, to attend 
J ow f die Internal 

Exhibition. 

• The Athletic Association, whos 

ership in past years consisted of 

lists boys on its roster. The 
sponsoring men s bas- 
;iail tb; Games are scheduled 

>ut-of-c 

• The various campus clubs th: 

ring after-dinner coffee in 
tfae lounge following candle-light din- 
ners on Wednesday evenings. Entertain- 
me, tovided on these oc< by 

: the music or dramatics de- 
nt. In November Arnold Bern- 
inna tenor, gave a recital, fol- 
jjroup singing under his leader- 

• The first of the lectures and con- 

nes scheduled for this year was 

v John Clark Kimball of the 

. Council on Foreign Relations 

- 16. The second event in the 

sen concert November 15 by 

Harold Stark, tenor, and Mr. 

pianist, both of the music 

facu; rue University of lew 



















Alumni Office Looks Ahead 

I he next issue of the Alumni 
News will be in April, a long 
rime to wait before the news from the 
Christmas cards reaches you, but we 
had SO many news items after my letter 
in the October issue that there was 
room for no more at this time. 

By April we will have final plans 
for our reunions. This year we will 
not be having our usual May Fete and 
the Horse Show at the Glengarry Stables 
will be held earlier in May than usual 
because of the oncoming comprehensive 
examinations. There might be an ad- 
vantage in this change from the point 
of view of the alumni. You will not 
have to share the honors with a May 
Queen, an equestrienne and a horde of 
parents. Commencement can really be 
your reunion day and the groups which 
return can help us plan their activities 
for a day or two. 

The date will be June 2 and 3, 1951 
and the classes especially invited to re- 
turn are: 

Class of 1901 for their 50th 
Classes of 1911 for their 40th 
Classes of 1921 for their 30th 
Classes of 1926 for their 25th 
Classes of 1931 for their 20th 
Classes of 1941 for their 10th 

Once upon a time we used the Welles- 
ley plan for reunions inviting classes 
to return every five years in blocks of 
four years. We would like an expression 
of opinion from you as to which plan 
you prefer. 

Of course we hope many others, both 
old students and graduates, will join 
us for the reunion festivities. 



EX-FACULTY 

Ella Fortna Fairchild, { Instructor in 
Home Economics \24-' 42 ; and her hus- 
band are settled in Alaska teaching na- 
tive Aleutian children at Sc. George 



Island, 2,500 miles from Seattle. They 
live in a six room modern furnished 
house. They have about 38 children in 
grades 1-8. The natives of the village, 
about 200 of them, are Aleuts descen- 
dants of an Indian race, with a mixture 
of Japanese and Russian, no Eskimos 
there. 

Lelia K. Wright ( Admissions Coun- 
selor 1913-49) is again living in Ap- 
pleton, Wisconsin and is doing admis- 
sions work for McMurray College. 

Elizabeth Moellet I Instructor in Art 
1931-34 and 1936-38) was married 
during the summer to M. H. J. Geiken 
of Davenport, Iowa. Mrs, Geiken is 
director of the Davenport Municipal 
Art Galley, a position which she has 
held since leaving Shimer. Her husband 
is a representative of a life insurance 
company in Davenport. 

Mary Q. Pollard (Instructor in Eng- 
lish and Secertary to the President 1916- 
36) writes characteristically from her 
home in Middlebury, Vermont: "I am 
as usual busy. Yesterdav was out on a 
tout with one of my friends, went to 
an old cemetery in West Cornwall; with 
wild roses and weeds and thistles, and 
my wabbling knees and feet I tele I 
was lucky to get back without broken 
bones. Then we went on to . . . All 
this was to get me away from my house 
while a new ceiling was being put on 
my living room. The plaster fell $evt 
weeks ago. Such is life in an old hou 

Friends of Frances Hammitt ( L: 
rial) \9 ) were startled by rhe 

nouncement in July of her death. Lois 
Engleman had seen her in Chicago at 
the A.L.A. meeting in late January and 
though she looked frail she was 
cious, friendly, and terrifically busv 
alwa 

Miss Grant Dean of [lie WJLU. 
School of Library Science where Miss 
Hammitt has been teaching foe g 

ontinued on page t 









EX-FACULTY 

rs, wrote to Miss Bngleman, 
was obviously foiling during the spring. 
Her final illness was .1 brief 01 

Hvla Snider ( Instructor rial 

and Stenography !°- 
u rites from Connecticut Women's 
lege, win has been teaching since 

Shinier, "1 read with interest 
the recent change or name and nature 
Shimer College. 1 am wondering 
whether rial studies have Mir- 

ed under the chani; jrriculum. 

I am still convinced that something very 
ssary can be contributed bj such 
rk without great detriment to the 
liberal arts 

Mona Rohison (Nurse at Shin 

completed on October 1 a course 
in anaesthesia administration at the Ball 
rnoriai Hospital in Muneic. Indiana, 
and is now on the start of that institu- 
tion, residing at 618 E Washington, 
Muncie. Indiana. 

Mr. Scofield (Riding Instructor i2- 
5 happily situated with a wonder- 
ful show sta! North Carolina. The 
family have a winter stable in Florida 
six months of the year. His present 
address is Mr. William H. Scotfieki 
Galvin Srables, Lenoir. \.< 

Karan Tuck Hoffman (Piano Ins- 
tructor has two boys. Edward, 
6 and George, age 5. Her husband, 
Bill Hoffman, stills sells Da-Light Screens 
she still gives a few piano programs. 
Mr. R. H. Seitner, who for several 
public relations director at 
Shinier and published the Alumni News, 
has resigned this position and is now 
in the insurance firm or Leigh and Huber 
:n Mt. Carroll. 



• The foil 

tiddU of tin- 

i ill 
April 

• li 

r Shin 



Tlie Scattered Family 

1874 

r interesting not< 
from are! Si 

Ballantine R. Bohart), She tells 
tering Mt. < arroll Seminary in 18 2 and 
leaving in 1874 to be iad 

brothers, one ol whom, I '■' 

,| u u,,s on the stafl ol the 

University ol < edalls1 

the Presbyterian Hospital in 

and Throat. Ml rcscnl 

dress is 1245 Spring Street, : 

Pennsylvania, 

1884 

Mrs 1 J. Migl 
passed away October Jl, 1950, ai the 

liq e of 86 years. Since INNS she 
lived in Lake City, Iowa, w\ 
has been active in all phases ol com- 
munifv work. Her son. Albert James 
Mighell, has written ol his mother's 
remembrances of Miss Joy and hei ability 
and thoroughness in teaching methods. 
Mighcll has offered to send us some 
old letters and pictures which his mother 
had treasured from her school days to 
add to our historical collection. 
1890 
Bina Malar, neen died recently 

in her home in Chicago. On leaving 
Frances Shimer she married Charles S. 
Deneen and was, as she herself expressed 
it, a passive politician for more than 
40 vears. 

1893 
Olive H Parker writes from 

her home at Cambria, California, such 
an interesting letter that we quote it 
in full: "I have just received the Shimer 
College Record with the beautiful pic- 
ture of Isabelle Dearborn Hazzea. Many 
rs have lapsed since I was enrolled 
>ne of her Vocal pupils", yt 
years ago. A shy young lady I was; 
homesick and untrained in the ways of 
college life, I can never forget Mrs. 
Hazzen. She was indeed a friend to 
all, always cheerful and ready to assist, 
when you felt like giving up, always in- 









stilling courage and confidence that 

made one's endeavor seem quite worth 

while. I never became a prima donna 

hut have turned my talents into teaching 

and writing and now at SO years old 

am launching on the gr< (venture 

of my life. I am a member of the Shinier 

Alumnae of Los Angeles although 1 

Jive up the coast from there 250 miles. 

I still hope some day to visit Mr ( arroll 

mu\ Shinier College. It is much changed 

but I think it would still look familiar. 

I note with a glad heart its wonderful 

::ress for bigger and better advantages 

'his wonderful generation coming 

God bless all who are now sheltered 

there. 

Mosr heartily, 
ve B, Parker 
1891 
ylei Robison and Minnie 
1895, were on campus in Octo- 
ber and seemed to enjoy the cha. 
they saw. They visited the art laboratory 
and looked at Mrs. Hazzen s portrait in 
Dearborn. Everything brought up mem- 
ories of their days here, 

Dorothy Topping Wood keeps in 
touch with Shinier through the Record. 
She write sister Florence Topping 

was graduated some years before me 
and is nov old- She was a pupil 

of Isabelle Hazzen. My piano teacher 
was Luella Totten. I am a concert 
pianist and have been very active pre- 
fessionally". 

1895 
Marj Tapscott i 
change of addr 12? Bayo V 

Ave., Oakland II, California. She writ 
that her training at Shinier was n 
valuable to her and the memories are- 
dear to her, 

1898 
Edna /. Smith, 1898 and 1900, sends 
us a new address, 406 West FJk Street, 
Freeport, Illinois. 

1903 
Helen Cobutn Hon til has added a 
w activiry to her usual program of 
writing. She is to be editor of a monthly 



bulletin of houK-ruwn news tor men 
and women from \\' or land, Wvomin, 
who are in the service. Her regular work 
is for the Billings Galeae and news 
items tor KWOR. 

1906 
KOS6 Lam Leaki writes that she is al- 
ways glad to hear from "good old Frano 
Sinner". She roomed in Hathaway Hall 
tor two years and can hardly imagine 
boys there now, and on campi. is 

a farmers wife and lives near Amb<> 
Illinois. 

1908 
Marietta Smith Dreutzer passed away 
in St, Josephs Hospital in Elgin, HI. on 
K 1950. 

1909 
Emma Slade Lawrence, Alexis, 111., 
visited campus in October and indulged 
in a bit of reminiscing. 

1010 
Helen Miles Strhkhv of Honolulu, 
Hawaii, spent the past summer in Mt. 
Carroll, Chicago and Pennsylvania vis- 
iting relatives and old friends. 
1914 

and her hi 

band, H. Harper Mi 
that to dat are the on! gradu- 

ates of Shinier that married each oth 
They expect now, b 
of foil cnc j r v 

children were married last Ma 

one 

or the 

Kees called on 1 

They found, her bu lt h 

m^\ d 

tercstcd in we.!', 
such. 

1917 

5 GOOSt in- 
terestingly of her a a volutin, 
social service worker in Kan ty, 
Missouri, "I fLive been inspecting < 
for the Naturalization Program in Kan- 
sas to evalutc the 

present teaching method im 

d that the New \\>r>. 
Naturalization Council has adopted p 



—9— 






ol our outline K>r instruction oi future 

tf// Unnhi/tf has been on 

an exteusiTc European tour w/th her 

husband. 

1918 

Mm Tippett Monmrn wn on campus 
in the tall She lives m Elizabeth, III. 
and does surv fi she finds 

v i utet ts d og 

Eli writes com- 

forting words from her home in Chest 
erton, Indiana: 'Just why did not Fran- 
Shimef decide to include boys in 
their curriculum sooner' Certainly I 
would have welcomed a nice Fran* 
Shinier girl iaughter-indaw p 

sibilin Mj >r wish* 

in Shinier undertaking Eloise is 

busv with civic clubs and church work. 
Her special satisfaction is seeing her 
Sunday School class enter into church 
membership. 

Heline Hollo u married 

Octoh i 950 to John R. Schcmi 

in Sufferr tk. Helcnes present 

address is 6" Park Avenue York. 

Her business at! m 

AvcnU York, where she is Vice- 

President of Sr. Marys Robes, Inc. 
1919 
Jjk announces that she 

is grandmother of Peter ( <.n Kun 

of Jane Pelck Kurth who v. 

born July 21. 1950. The Kurth addr. 
Hawthorne Avenue. W 

1920 

De 5hc writes of the death 



Helm R. 
writes that she } i 25 

VCiK She baa oily and 

•ive in civic affair: ially 

the American LcglOtl Auxiliary of wl 

s h been president tor i 

Helen visits \v ' pan rOI Mt. 

trroll occasional!) bai 

iways I n £ 

she drr- 

1923 

bell bomnvUk writ* 

she tor one would not id ro h 

Latin eliminated from the curnculi 
Her tv I Shimer remain as im- 

portant ro her as her \km^ ill Golk 
She has tW) children. I lOl 

W'eijesley, and Bob wrho is in High 
School Mr. Lottinville is a shoe dealer 
and a philatelist in his spare momc 
Gail has been teaching music for manv 
Years but is now teaching Bridge, a job 
which was rather forced on her but 
which she tinds she likes doing v 

much. 

1924 

Ellen Burkhart is teaching English in 
high-school in Benton, Illin I is at 

present President of the A.A.U.W. there. 
Etlousse Ballstadt O husband 

passed away this fail after an illness of 
several years duration. She has not 
seen any ol her Shimer friends for 
years and hopes to resume her annual 
Christmas messages with them. 
1925 
irgaret Pn chard Carl sou has mo> 
-2-vith St., Arlington, Va. Mme. 
Scott reports that Margarets daughter, 
Holly, is a dear. Speaking of Mme. 



of her hus grand-daughter Scott, she hopes to visit Joan in Toledo 

Jast May. 



1922 
i Hopi R. E. 

Harrisburg, Penn. where 
Schuyler Hall Th' 
LUghfer, Nanc. 
■ Williams and Mar- 
in Mathematics and 
ght As, unlike her moth 



next summer and come on 
to see if her rubber plant 



Shimer 
is able to 
stand th -sphere. 

William* Bi^x x has written 

mem r Shimer arc all happy 

ones and I am always interested in what 

is happening there. I think the new 

good one and with the 

rid in such a mess I am sure it will 

be an experiment well worth dun: 



—10— 



ivcs in Washington and I 
hef often. Her husband is with the 
Department of Agriculture. Edith v 
(librarian 24 2 i I >1()m on , 

when we ( bicagO. Her bus- 

band .s editor of Row Peterson, text 
hook publishers, and a delightful per- 
il. 

Janet Millet Gallatin has been livinc 

,0 , r ' ,V * '» Homestead. Ilorida 

her husband is government re- 

irdl Chemist Janet has been teaching 

« »«>ur years and plans to prepare to 

tch in the Exceptional Children., De 

partmenc. She has one son, Jimmy, »« 

1 I /ears. e 

1928 
tdelaim lelsohn appeared on 

npus early in October and gave us 
of her activities along literary and 
music In. -he west coast, in Ni 

York and Chicago. Her , ls g] 

ryland Ave.. Chicago, l 

"Fritzse" Peterson Marshall and her 
family are happy in their new home 
in Skokac where her address is 9032 
Keystone Avenue. Her twin daughters 
are in High School. 

1929 

In March, 1950. Dorothy Foglt 
received her Ph.D. degree in the Biolo- 
gical Science Division at the University 
of Chicago. She is at present Psycholo- 
gist in the Division of Child Stud 
the Board of Education, Chicu 

1933 
Mat 

farm near Mt. Pulaski, 111. Sh one 

son, George, age 12. Mary has b, 

very active in civic affairs is president 
of the local Women's Club and of the 
local Home Bureau unit. Her sister 
Lucilv on 

an adjoining farm and has four children, 
the two older ones in school. 

' m lives in Chicago ami 

ecretary to a real estate firm, a po 

h she has held for several 

She has been studying voice and 

piano and sings with a couple ,irs. 



Inn I the 

Kentucky Baptist Hospital. Louisville. 
Kentucky. O 19, 1950. She \s 

survived by her husband and 
children, John VC Muir, J- md 

Ann Riches Muir. age i. Ann has Ixxn 
an active leader in her community, in 
club work, music activr 1 D.A.R 

Mary fi. Blackman Pippert is maintain- 
ing a fleet of nine vehicles for the V- 

tour station wagons, one sedan, 
one paraplegic training car, one mobile 
kitchen, and two trucks, twentv four 
hours a day for a seven d k, tor 

motor service of the Indianapolis Chap- 
ter of the American Red It is 
volunteer service but takes five 
a week, regular duty to keep them ru 
ning. The vehicles serve two veterans 
Hospitals. Fort Benjamin Harrison and 
rhc entire city of Indianapolis Mar) 

Iress is 828 Kast Edward Avenue, i 
Indiana 

1934 

Mary Li>,uh Helton visited campus in 
October with her three childrt 

:rtha h named 

August 2, 1950 to Dr. Curt Eisenb, 
m Media. Pa. Her presenr add- 
155 E. 51st Stre 

s living 
>2 Glenwood, Grand June:, 
rado where her h 
Johnson. Jr. MSt . •] 

four children. B 
age i, Sr, 
June 6, 195 

^ter B- 
they remember Shimer wit! 
ness and hope 
campus 

I!J35 
Lou:,c \\ 
an the L'mversin 
employed at the K 
the National Naval Medical I 
at Bethesda, Maryland. Dr. V 
rkmg on atomic bun 

1936 
Jean H ..{. M. J. Q 

grocer in Waterlo 



—11— 



theit own bus suburban h 

tid eKtra-curriculat activity 
furnished by two pleasun saddle 
horscj They have one daughter, Diane, 
three and a hall years old 

marrii 
\ ilhiim Gaines oi Den- 
H sist< r, Lorn 

w.iv tier attendant After leaving 
Shimer, Louii I her Bachelo 

m Hr.i od hei 

\i from 

in- 

wixh tin Red 

husband is in 

business in O U* " 

engaged in social work in Evanston 
her addj larzell 

19S8 

Her husband, Eugene K Fishej 

\i engineering in the 
Insuor co de Aerons 

Their fourth Katherine 

her >rn or in 

TO. 

she 
moving in the right directii she 

Ohio. 

man with . Thur 

on in Tolf 

Mrs Jack H- 
Kohrs, 3216 Davenport Avenue. Daven- 
Shc has two son 
rid Pau. has a 

Home Eco- 
nomics and her husband one in Mechani- 
cal Engineering. 

1939 

v writes from 
Garlanv :iut% Takoma Park, 

ago Sunday 
alums from here I a with 

id Mrs me St- 

'as many of us still call hen was her 
tl self and we had a delightful 
us refreshments. .\L 
as unable to come as she \ 



bus.lv preparing for i tri] 

ttend rhi I '> *i I 

(owing week I hop nut little group h 

securely cnoi 
ome financial help n 

rem! tin 0Oll< 

Alumnae 

HalUn Jam 

m thai 
(h , not hav< 

and h 
announce the birth 

l 

campus in October 
in Kokoma, Indiana, and I 

and her busban 

tnounce the birth 

>50 in 

line, Hiiro 

70th Str 
.ri. 

campus 
briefly during the Fall. She and her hus- 
band 1 f«m near Brew- 
irk. They are not farmers, 
however. Her address is Mrs R. D Fich- 
tel, Bn Hill Road, Brewstei 

1940 

u with her tl 
6 and 7, and her husband 
impus on their way to 
aata, Georgia from San Francis 
Johnson is in the Air Force and has 
:i flying supplies from the St* 
an. 

and her husband Ed- 
ward Sturtz announce the birth oi a 
daughter, September 15, 1950. 

Harrii s married in 

15 and has been living the life of a 



—12^ 



La, 
l»us ( hristi, Texas, and P ^1 

Zoi in Ann 

olii while H<t husband rook his Mas- 
in Engineering Tin 

Hotppm tributes 

<>n is 
in RiKkfor.l on 

- hus- 

n a summer 

ity 

r husband, Bob, 

rak in the mu 

• 

1 III. 

\ 

their lift full of up and 

B 
into their n< ne in i 



19t : 

Ruth Marston is \men- 

Ail l ines and studying voice in an 

rksliop in Milwaukee under 

□ T VX'olmur. H is 2515 

Milwaukee 

Mr and Mrs J. William 

dman, a son, Paul 

Heinze on June > f 1 heir daughter 

Mimi is four yt Their addn 

2073 W. 107th St., Chicag BL 

writes of an interesting event 

in her famih 30 

when her tv-o children were baptized 

made members of the Trinity Meth- 

< rch in Chi She and h 

made members the 
sam 

*h:; irvard I'nr 

imbrici 
W - on her Ph.D. in Aathro] 

is delighted with he rkers and 

She wnres that she hn 

Uld her h 
Its, announce the birth 

:rth o on, 



Delor n stenograph nton. 



the Factory Insurance 
1941 

li 

11 Jr. and 

i 
well is in the advertising departm 

of Life Magazine. They ba^ 

ige 2, L 
garet Ann 

rtised in a recent Alumnae 
from her grandmother in Spokane 
are all in favor of grandmoth. 

K : I and her hus- 

ban the birth Oi ond 

son. October 50. 



■ 
Pla 

- 
a s 

Mr. Hogan 

e in the canm 
tonica, II lino 

I 
1 1 1 1 »lr. McVey is uith the Eastn 

Kodak Com | tnd they will m 

their home in Roche LY. 

La: 

band announce the birth or a son, G 
Charal, on August 



-13— 



1944 

«nd h« husband 

,l->u.s.. I95 ° V: 

Henry 
and her husl 
, ack announce the birth ol 

ond daughter, Jodie PameUu onOct 

l9 50. Their first daughter is three vers 
old 

rlIirv ! 1946 to Edward Booth Hoffman. 
They have a daughter, lulu Mar) thi 

,.,1 Dorothy is trying o 
;, ' ri . U n,on in Chicago for the classes nl 

and 

her husband announce the birth of a 

Lighter. Hope, on October 9, 1950 m 

Chicagi 

,d her husband 

announce the birth of a SOD, .Ian 
Howard, on October 30. Their 

present address is 1521 West Sherwm 
Avenue. Chicago 26. 

Barbara Tartar and her husband 
Alexander Marx, announce the birth of 
a daughter. Christine Ann. on Noveni- 

r 25, 1950, and a change of addn 
2 Hammond, Waterloo. Iowa. 

was mar- 

ried on October 19, 1950 to Mr. Harris 

DC in Chicago. 

v 7 'ravers and her husband, J. 
hie Binns. announce the birth of a 
ghter. named Janet Allison, on Sep- 
re0 1950. Their address is 11' 

Snyder Lane. Bakersfield, California. 

/ and her husband, James 
rathy. announce the birth of a 
Patrice Marie, on August 

1945 

orking in her fathers 

lumber com here she is a secretary 

and does all the things that go with 

being nly girl in the office. She has 

taken U] new 

hob: 

is well and happy 



„ lin ,ng. driving and ruling hO« 
! Hope, Illiro , . 

„lv .,,, frompdc Park 

- Pottei v Dale, IU»hois,i wb- 

» rt I h -r hi 

and h 
band ..- « birth ol 

pTan John on August 2 
U Illinois. Their address « 100 

Talman, ( 

oding Shimet this 

wasmarru 

atf , r graduating fro* the Mmneapo 

Art SctooU to Leo j. Fecht 

,„ England they both 

where th. I •« * 

Their addi "*fH e * " 

Grand, de ta <,r,m ' 

de Chaumiere, Paris 

mg in 

\x con, Pennsylvania, what 

husband is on the faculty at Washing! 

and Jefferson College, in the department 
of Political Science. Betty Van Schwata 

Q e of Dorothy's attendants at her 
tiding in Madison, June. 19 I 

O shorn is the tenor 
the famous girls* quartet, the Chordetl 
a place winch she won on the Arthur 
God f rev Talent Lipton Tea Show, Sep- 
tember She has a seven year con- 
tract to s.ng for CB.S. Her first album 
of records, "Harmony Time ' has been 
among the nation's first five best sell 
since it was released. Virginia appears 
mornings on radio and Wednesday 
nights on television. 
1946 
Mm Cunningham is Mrs. Robert 
Fnedley, 1143 Columbia Street, Water- 
loo, Iowa. Her husband is lanical 
Engineer and they have a son Kim born 
October 8, 1947. Jam Tborngren Station 
has been ill with polio since August and 
uld be most happy to hear from her 
friends. Her address is Mrs. Dan Station, 
Iowa Lutheran Hospital, Des Moines, 
lov 

Ramoiia B aslin and her hus- 

announce the birth of a son, Scott Arthur, 



—14—