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F ilC' ULTY
N E !I S

B UL L E TI N

Southern Illinois University Resi dence Center s

February, 1959

Vo 1 ume

II,

No • Lf

�FEB!RUARY J

VoL ..

1959
FACULTY

.,
. "'

NEWS

II~

No •. 4

BULLETIN

THE IDEA IS NOT NEW
Some of you may have been asked, "Hhy should I give to help buy land for a state
university? Don't we pay enough taxes for our state universities to buy their
own land?" Or you may have had this question posed, 11 Hhy 2,600 acres?" The following information should help you answer these questions.

Historically, colleges have been started on plots of land which proved to be in•
adequate in size. Today scores of them are faced with the alternative of turning
away students or overflowing into commercial districts and residential areas where
property values have risen inordinately. With too small an original land site, the
growing institution cheats itself in direct ratio to its ot·m growth. A campus Hith
sufficient acreage is better able from the outset to cope "t&gt;lith the tremendous traffic
problem created by a large student body comprised wholly of commuters.
In too many instcnces, urban universities with limited land holdings are unable to
prevent the development of undesirable enterprises or unsightly construction adjacent to academic buildings. Campuses located in metropolitan a~eas must constantly
battle against encroaching slums. If the battle is unsuccessful, and if there is no
protective buffer zone, these encroachments materially reduce the effectiveness of
these urban institutions of higher learning.

..

t-1ost important, a university \-lith an adequate campus can better provide the facilities
for outdoor education, physical fitness training, experiment stations, research tracts,
essential utilities and other undertakings so essential to a university program. It
is believed that Southern's new campus \17ill be one of the fe\-T urban universities
in the entire country that will not be harassed by problems of land acquisition.
The idea of a county providing a campus for a state university is not new to Illinois.
Champaign County, in a five-way race for the University of Illinois, won it by offering 980 acres of land, plus other material considerations and by lobbying a bill
through the legislature. Incidentally, according to the 1956 edition of American
Universities and Colleges, published by the American Council on Education, the University of Illinois conprises 5,639 acres. This does not take into consideration
any expansion on their part since 1956. Opponents of the site have been saying
that the Illinois campus is less than 500 acres.
Two of the most recent examples of campuses presented to state universities are the
$7,600,000 D3arborn Campus of the University of Michigan.,.( and the $10,000,000 Oakland
County Canpus of Michigan State University."("(
*210 acres, assessed at $10,000 pr:f .c acre before construction of buildings, were
given by the Ford faa1i.ly; $6,5CO,OOO Has given by the Ford Foundation for buildines.
"(*The 1,400-acre A. G.

~\Tilson

estate, plus $2,000,000 for buildings.

�-2The University of Michigan has a lone record of major gifts from individuals, including one for $10,000,000 from Horace H. Rackham, and it regularly receives major
research grants from private corporations (e . g., $400,000 from the Carnegie Corporation in 1957).
The University of Kansas acquired 20 of its buildings throu:::;h g.i fts, the University of
Delrovare 15, and the following universities one or more buildings each: Ohio State
University, vJestern State College, Eastern Michigan College, State College of Hashington, and the universities of Alabama, California, California at Los Angeles, Georgia,
Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Nebraska, South Dakota and l1innesota (Duluth
branch).
Many state university libraries receive private donations, such as J. K. Lilly's
gift of rare books to Indiana University, valued at $5,000,000.
Annual income from private gifts runs to $10,000,000 and more each for such land-grant
institutions as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cornell and Ohio State universities, and the University of Minnesota, with the universities of California, Illinois
and Hisconsin each receiving from $3,000,000 to $6,000,000 per year, the University
of Pennsylvania and Purdue University both getting more than $1,000,000 annually, and
the universities of Connecticut, Florida , Maryland and Texas A. &amp; M. each getting
from $300,000 to $800,000 yearly.
STUDENTS EA..'lNING THEIR

l~AY

Hore than 60 per cent of the students enrolled in degree pro:::;rams at SIU's residence
centers hold full- or part-time jobs, according to Dr. John Schnabel, associate
registrar. Hore than 99 per cent of the students in the university's industrial and
adult education program hold full-time jobs.

.

Industries engaged in manufacturing durable goods employ 872 of the 3,000 SIU students
finance all or a part of their education by working. Commercial enterprises in
the area. employ another 482 students, and 443 work for government agencies, including
317 who are employed by school boards. Health, welfare and recreation activities in
the 600,000-person area within a 35-mile radius of the centers employ 112 SIU students,
and still another 159 work part-time for the university itself.

~vho

The companies having the greatest number of students in the various programs of the
residence centers are: McDonnell Aircraft Corporation, 122; 0\·l ens-Illinois, 75;
Laclede Steel Company, 74; Shell Oil Company, 72; Granite City Steel Company, 66;
Olin }lathieson Chemical Corporation, 66; Emerson Electric Company, 51; Stapdard Oil
Company, 39; Union Starch and Refinine Company, 29; A. 0. Smith Corporation, 28;
Dow Chemical Company, 22; Monsanto Chemical Company, 21; and Alton Box Board Company,
18. Only ~3 of the students are ensa.eed in farming.
Dean Harold H. See says the hish percentage of students holding jobs demonstrates
that there has been a greater educational vacuum at the university level in }ladison
and St. Clair counties than 'vas indicated by all the reports and studies previously
conducted, including one made by Neu York University's Alonz o Myers under the sponsorship of the Southwestern Illinois Council for Higher Education.

�-3-

..

In addition to holding jobs, stude nt s r eceive state or federal help with their
education in the form of schol ar s hips or other grants. Tv1o hundred and seventy-four
students--175 of them attending the ~lton cente r --hold Illinois Military Scholarships,
available for a four-year period to anyone who was a resident of Illinois at the time
' of his entry into the armed forces .
Holding four-year State Teacher Training Scholarships awarded through the office of
the State Superintendent of Public Instruction are 154 students--54 of them at the
East St. Louis center. Veterans receiving benefits under the GI Bill number 397-268 of them at Alton.
Eighteen students at East St. Louis ~nd 31 at Alton hold scholarhip and activity
awards established by the SIU Board of Trustees. Awarded annually on a basis of
one to every 20 students \vith a better than C average, these ncholarships will increase in number as the student body grows, according to Dr. Schnabel .
MONEY TO INVEST? JOIN THE FALCON CLUB
Some of the East St. Louis faculty members have organized the Falcon Investment
Club. Chartered last December 1, purpose of the club is mutual pooling of investment funds for purchasing and selling s tocks and securities, learning how to analyze
financial statements and to make a study of stock market operations and procedures.
The members meet the fir s t \-Jednesday in each month. Virgil Seymour is president;
James Turner, vice president; Robert HcDaniel, secretary, and Joe Small is treasurer
agent. Each month two business f i rms are assigned to members Hho do research and
analysis of the firms and then report to the club. The club then votes on whether
or not to invest in that company. E ~ ch member makes a regular monthly investment
which is reinvested in securities each month. Membership is open to all full-time
faculty and administrative office rs at the East St . Louis Residence Center .

.
....

GIVES

ILLUSTR~TED

LECTURE

Kenneth F. Estey gave an illustrated lectureon Braz il December 28 to the men of
the First Hethodist Church of Hood River. On January 9 he gave a lecture on Islam
before the Hesleyan Service League of the same church. On January 21 he lectured
on Islam and showed slides to the Homen ' s Society of the Grace Methodist Church in
Alton.

BLAKELY ADDr-ESSES MOTHERS CLUB
Dr. Lloyd Blakely, Alton, spoke December
Godfrey Schoo 1.

Lf

at a meeting of the Mothers Club at

�-4-

BRIDGE--AN EXTRA CURRICULAR ITEH
"'

The people in Room lOlA at the East St. Louis Center don't see enough of each
other during office hours so three o£ them get together for bridge. The three
are members of the Division of Science and Math, Hilliam Probst, Florence Fanning
and George Arnold. The foreigner \·l ho makes . up the foursome ic Robert Steinkellner.
Sometimes his spot is filled by Joe Small. Between plays they imbibe in a little
food. Comment of the Executive Dean the first time he lool:ed in on this extra
curricular activity, "He' 11 have to increase the teaching load." P-L-E-A-S-E,
Dr. See, not that~
INDUSTRIAL AND ADULT EDUCATION
There \·1 ere 669 students enrolled in the Division of Industrial and Adult Education
during the Fall quarter, an increase of almost 100 per cent over any previous c;uarter.
Industry's interest in the program is evidenced by the fact that each term more artd
more in-plant classes are being offered on company time. Three industrial organ{ ..
zations \&lt;Jish to offer safety traininr;, one of them to 300 employees. A fourth
industrial orr;anization wishes to train 50 supervisors in report writing.
FACULTY SPEAKERS' BUREAU AT EAST ST. LOUIS
The University has published and mailed several hundred community groups a brochure
listing the members of the neHly-established Faculty Speakers' Bureau at the East
St. Louis Residence Center. Topics licted range from "Hm-1 to Nanage Y-:&gt;ur Money" to
"Crime and Criminal Behavior." The bureau was organized by Clifton Cornwell in an
effort to handle the many requests for speakers which the University is receiving
and to acquaint program chairmen with the variety of speakerc available.
Members of the bureau are Ernest L. Boyd, Milton B. Byrd, S. D. Lovell, Virgil L.
Seymour, Joe R. Small, H. H. Smith, Robert Steinkellner, Jack B. Thomas, James D.
TurDer and Cornwell.
ADDRESSES JUNIOR HIGH
H. H. Smith gave the address at promotion exercises hel.d recently at Clark Junior
High School in East St. Louis. Hi's subject--''Looking Forward to High School."
REAPPOINTED TO HALL OF

F~lli

Dr. Frank L. Eversull has been reappointed for the fifth four-year term as an
elector of the New York University Hall of Fame. The reappointment was made by
Dr. Ralph Sockman, NYU president. Dr. Eversull \11ill be the keynote speaker Hay 5
when the annual General Federation of Homen's Clubs of Illinois convenes at the
Hotel Sherman in Chicago.
FORHER FACULTY 't-1EMBER DIES
lvord has been received of the death of Dr. Horace Huddle, former chemistry professor
at the East St. Louis center. He died during the Christmas holidays from a heart attack.

�-5PROMOTE INTEREST IN MUSIC

..-·

An enthusiastic group of 40 Altonites met for dinner January 23 at Tolman Hall to
help Hith plans for recruiting the best musical talent in the area. According to
Dr. Herrold E. Headley, a Greater Alton Choral Society Hill be formed by merger vlith
the University Chorus. The group \·J ill start rehearsals February 23 for Cherubini' G
11
Requiem in c Hinor, 11 to be given in late spring. Faculty members and spouses are
encouraged to participate.
On February 12 the St. Clair County Band Hasters Association ~Jill hold its regular
business meeting at the East St. Louin Residence Center's cafeteria. They are
meeting at SIU on invitation of Dr. Lloyd Blakely. A HoodHind quartet composed
of faculty members on the Carbondale campus lvill be here for the meeting and \·l arkshop. The band masters have asked Dr. Leonard B. Hheat to present SIU's graduate
program to them.
EVALUATE NUSIC PROGRAN
Dr. Lloyd G. Blakely and Dr. Herrold E. Headley served on a three-man committee
to evaluate the music program of the Edl·l ardsville public schools. The third member vlas Lee Fritz, director of music in the Alton public schools. The committee
found the Eduardsville program v7ell-bal~.mced, with an excellent teaching staff.
The three made some suggestions for additional equipment and development of the
stringed instrument section.
MEMBERS OF ALTON CIVIC ORCHESTRA

•

Two staff members and four faculty uivcs play in the Alton Civic Orchestra. The
staffers are Lloyd Blakely, who playn clarinet, and John Schnabel, oboist. The
distaffers are Mrs. Blakely, violinist; Mrs. Schnabel, oboist; Mrs. Charles Hooks,
violinist, and Mrs. Herrold Headley, uho plays bass viol .

...
Hot-1EN' S CLUB ACTIVITIES
\.Jilliam Lyons, head of Information Service for SIU, \vas speaker at the club's
January meeting on the fifteenth. His informal talk was entitled 11 Your Public
11
Rel~tions Are Showing.
He discussed the ~.Jhat, How and Hhy of keeping the public informed about Southern and illustrated his points ~vith pictures and stories
about the University and staff uhich have appeared in net·m papers all over the
country, on radio and television. Lyons and his staff have an average of 400
stories printed each month and from 600-700 photographs appear in print. His
rules could be placed on a postal card, he said. They are: _ 1) Do the job the
best \vay you know how; 2) Hrite the story as the editor uants it to make sure
it is printed; 3) Do it; 4) Variety. Hr. Lyons pointed out the kinds of items
t.;hich \·l ill make news, saying he uses every means at his disposal to get GOOD
things in print.

�-6In the Easter Parade

•

Husbands had better be prepared to Oh! and Ah! at their \vives Easter bonnets.
No shaking your heads with disdain, for \vifey mayhave made this chapeau herself.
Yes, the women of the Southwestern Illinois Residence Centers are going to have
a lesson in hat making at their February 19 meeting. There Hill also be a fashion
show. The meeting will convene at 1:00 p.m. in the College Avenue Presbyterian
Church at Alton.
SUPPLY l'IINISTER AT ALTON CHURCH
Robert Hurdoch fills the pulpit of the Unitarian Church of Alton on an average
of two Sundays of each month. At present the church is without a minister.
Some of Nurdoch' s topics have been: "On Building a Personal I',eligion" (a
revie'" of the factors that make religious experience dynamic, not merely ritualistic);
"Oedipus, or Reflections on Cosmic llorality" (a scrutiny of the cosmic justification for ethical behavior); "God--The Elusive Pimpernel" (a study of man's quest
for God throughout history); " \!anted: Candidates for Utopia" (an investigation of
the grounds for a functioning optimism in human experience); "The Danger of Religious
Label-StickinG" (a discussion of the violence done to Truth through definition);
"Religion as Hearsay, Experience, and Habit" (an exposition of the steps whereby
religion develops from cultural pattern to ethical practice); "The Best of All
Possible Horlds--Hhere?" (a consideration of the human quest for meaning in existence); "On Cultivating our Critics " (an explanation of the moral necessity of
fostering dissident philosophies in Church and Society); "The Birth of a Hero"
(a Christmas meditation on the emotional need for hero-•·mrship as an integrating
factor in religion).
Before joininr:; the SIU staff in the summer school of 1957, Hurdoch had served nine
years at Shurtleff College. During that time he addressed congregations of many
denominations in and around Alton. llurdoch was born in Scot Lmd where he served
15 years in the ministry.
OPEN UEETING OF AAUP

i

The Alton chapter of AAUP is having an open meeting February 9 at 3:30 p.m. in
Room 300 Administration Building. Dr. 1-Jillia G. Swartz, dean of the Graduate
School, and Dr. John 0. Anderson, assistant dean, from the Carbondale campus Hill
discuss research grants and teaching load for faculty members engaged in research
projects. Hembers of the faculty at each center are invited to attend.
WHO'S HHO n ; i\}iERICAN HOMEN
Two staff members are listed in the first edition of OHO' S 1-n-10 IN AMERICAN HDr-!EN.
They are Dr. Hary Hargaret Brady and Dr. Ruth Kilchenmann. The latter has .been
appointed a member of the national committee for Foreign Languages in Elementary
Schools of the American Association Teachers of German, in charge of promoting
FLES in the southern Illinois area.

�-7NEW STAFF NEl-ffiERS
A new English instructor at the East St. Louis center as of this quarter is
Peter LaHton Simpson, 4107 Magnolia, St. Louis 10. Simpson received both the
B.S. and ~I.A. degrees from St. Louis University where he had a fellowship and
assistantship. Simpson is married and has a 16-month-old daushter, Catherine
Elizabeth.
Community Development, with offices in the Broadview, has added Lila Teer
(Mrs. Fred) to its staff. Mrs. Teer is assistant executive secretary of the
East St. Louis Social Planning Council. She joined the staff December 10.
NEW ADDRESSES
:Hr. and Hrs. Thomas Evans, 200 Joseph Drive, Belleville
Mr. and Hrs. John Glynn, 3021 Leverett, Alton
Mr. and Hrs. Ray Gwillim, 232 Arbor Drive, Alton
Mr. and Hrs. Uicholas Joost, 1703 Liberty Street, Alton
Niss Ollie Hae Hilliams, 201 South Nineteenth Street, Belleville
Miss Ruth Kilchenmann, 1012 Main Street, Alton
ATTENDED HEETINGS
Dr. Lloyd G. Blakely attended the College Band Director's National Association
at Urbana on December 18.
Dr. Nary Narcaret Brady and Kenneth E. Hartin attended the National Business
Teachers Association convention in Chicago December 30-31 and January 1. Dr.
Brady served as liaison officer of the Bookkeeping and Accounting Round Table.
On February 12, 13 and 14 they plan to attend the National Association for
Business Teacher Education. }1artin is a consultant on one of the counseling
committees.
Dr. H. H. Rosenthal attended the meeting of the American Historical Association
in Hashington, D.C., December 28-30.
In October Babette Marks attended the St. Louis meeting of the American School
Health Association. November 12-14 she attended the Illinois Association for
Health, Physical Education and Recreation meetings in Peoria. On November 15
she participated in the Mid,vest Section Field Hockey Tournament in Chicago,
playing on the St. Louis team. Other teams participating were Chicago, Milwaukee,
Madison, loHa City, La Crosse and North Shore (Chicago).
Mildred Arnold (Mrs. George) attended the District V (Great Lakes) conference
of the American Alumni Council December 7-10 at the Del Prado Hotel, Chicago.
Mrs. Arnold is treasurer of District V. She also served on a panel at the
conference. ·

�-8-

BRADY RECEIVES HONORABLE MENTION FOR DISSERTATION
At the Delta Pi Epsilon conference held during the National Business Teachers
Association convention in Chicago (December 30-January ~) announcement was made
that the doctoral dissertation of Nary Nargaret Brady had been given honorable
mention by the award committee. Out of 18 submitted during 1957, one received
the annual rovard and three received honorable mention. Delta Pi Epsilon is a
graduate honorary business education fraternity. Title of Dr. Brady's dissertation is "A Training Program for Operators of Key-Driven Calculators Based on
an Analysis of Hork Activities."
MILTON BYRD CO-AUTHOR OF PUBLICATION GUIDE
A RevieH by Dr. Robert \·J. Duncan
Dr. Milton Byrd, of t~e English department at the East St. Louis Residence Center,
is co-author of a very useful and much needed Publication Guide for Literary and
Linguistic Scholars, released in December by the Wayne State University Press.
He and Dr. Arnold Goldsmith, of Hayne, surveyed the publication requirements--the
editorial policies, format demands, methods of handling manuscripts--of 180 American
and Canadian periodicals which publish literary and linguistic scholarship and literary criticism, and organized the re s ults of their compiLation in brief and useful form.
The paper-back, which sellsfor $1.95, does for the working scholar what \.Jriter's
Yearbook does for the commercial ~vriter: it enables him to select the most appropriate publication for his work, and advises him on hoH to prepare it. In~ delightful preface, Uilliam Riley Parker , former editor of the Publications of Hodern
Language Association, asks, "Hm·l did so many authors become scholarly authors and
yet continue so ignorant of the pe riodicals which publish scholarship?'' As editor
of PHLA he Has astonished at both misdirected manuscripts and manuscripts poorly
prepared. "But if this Guide i s uidely used," he continues, "editors may eventually
come to believe that scholarly authors knmv what they are doing . 11
(Residence center faculty members in other fields might consider the possibility
of similar volumes in their mm areas.)

REVIEUS FOR POST-DISPATCH
On January 25 Narion A. Taylor's revie\'J of The King of Flesh and Blood appeared
in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. A pouerful story of Judea in the first centu~y
B.C., the book was written by Hoshe Shamir. It was translated from the Hebre~v
by David Patterson, and was publishe d by Vanguard Press. Hiss Taylor receives
a book to review about every six Heel~s, so she says you could call her a "semipermanent occasional reviewer."

STORIES AND 1\RTICLES IN PRINT
Dr. David E. Bear has been advised by Elementary School Journal that his article
entitled "A Comparison of a Synthetic Hith an Analytic Nethod of Teaching Phonics
in the First Grade" has been accepted for publication. This research report is a
summary of an investigation \17hich Bear conducted in the Alton Public Schools
during the 1956-57 school year, involving about L;OO students.

�-

('

-

Dr. All:red E. Kuenzli has written a book, The Phenomenological Problem, \'17hich is
scheduled to come off the press in mid-summer (if the author "completes the index
and other details on schedule"). The book is a compilation of scholarly papers
by noted authorities in the field of personality and social psychology.
The January issue of Journal of Educational Research carries an article by Hm1ard
Davis on "The Status of Guidance \Jorl~er s in Hissouri, 1953-57 . "

..

Dr. Robert Duncan has been advised that a story of his, "Gr ou Old Along Hith Us,"
published six years ago in Air F-1 cts lla gaz ine, Hill be reprinted in a forthcoming
edition of Durban Wings Club Magaz ine of Natal, South Af rica. Duncan has also
received \'17ord that the next issue of Air Facts is pub lishinr; a satire of his on
spare parts.
The October issue of N!H York ji s tory , o f ficial publication o f the New York
Historical Association , carried an article by Dr. H. H. Rosenthal. Entitled
"The Cruise of the Tarpon," the article tells about a meetinG of President
Hilliam I-Im·l ard Taft and the former Pr e s ident Theodore Roosevelt. Cruising on
Long Island Sound in a motor boat durin3 a gale, the two men uere trying to
prove to the people that they were united in working for the Republican party
and its candidates in the 1910 ele ;_: tion.

�..

From the Desk of the Dean of Instruction
The following list represents faculty research and creative work in print
during the year 1958. It does not include editorial work, research in progress,
or plans for research. I am grateful to those faculty members ~;,.Jho have contributed this information, thus making the report possible.
For a year when many faculty members were concerned with moving into a new
environment, teaching new courses, and carrying heavy loads of instruction, student advisement and committee work, it seems to me tha·t the list is a heartening
one. I hope that as we are able to improve the teaching milieu, the length and
significance of the list will also improve.
~fuile recearch and/or creative activity is by no means the main purpose of
our institution, such activity does indicate the interest of our faculty in communicating, on a wider scale, with their colleagues and the interested public.
Usually the good teacher is also interested in such activity because in this way
he himself continues to study and learn.
William T. Going
RESEARCH and CREATIVE WORK,

CALENDill~

YEAR 1958

BOOKS:
Blakely, Lloyd George

"A Survey of the Status, Duties, Services and
Functions of the Office of the State Supervisor
of Nusic." Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation.
Boston: Boston University, School of Fine and
Applied Arts, 1958.

Brady, Hary M.

1959 ~erican Business Education Yearbook, The
Clerical Program in Business Education, Chapter 20,
"Methods of Teaching Clerical Practice Classes. 11
Vol. XV, published jointly by The Eastern Business
Teachers Association and The National Business
Teachers Association, Somerville, New Jersey:
Somerset Press.

Byrd, Ni 1 ton Bruce Gind
Goldsmith, Arnold L~

Publication Guide for Literary and Linguistic
Scholars. Detroit: \.Jayne State University
Press, 1958, p. XIII, 146.

Headley, Herrold E.

"The Choral I.Jorks of Arthur Honegger." Microfilmed Doctoral Dissertation. Denton, Texas:
North Texas State College, 1958.

•

ARTICLES:
Baker, Richard C.

11

Brady, Hary H.

"Report of Office Survey on Uses and Standards
for the Key-Driven Calculator . 11 Business Education Forum, Vol. XIII, No. 3 (December, 1958)
pp. 23-30.

Yesterday's Critics of the Federal Judicing."
Illinois Bar Journal. November, December, 1958.

�Articles:
Byrd, Milton Bruce

0.

"Voltaire's Love· Affairs vJi th Emilie Revealed."
Fort \-Jayne (Indiana) Ne\vS -Sen tine 1. March 22,
1958, p. 6. LA review of Uancy Mit ford, Voltaire
in Love, New York, 195~ .
"Horl~,

Thought of Camus Analyzed." Fort Wayne
(Indiana) News-Sentinel. Uay 3, 1958, p. 4.
[A review of Thomas Hanna, Th~Thought and Art
of Albert Camus, Chicago, 195~.
"Biocraphy of Oscar Hilde is Reprinted; Called
'Best'." Fort Wayne (Indiana) News-Sentinel.
Nay 17, 1958, p. 4.
~revieH of Frances Winwar,
Oscar Hilde and the YellovJ Nineties, New York,
1958l·
"'Credo' of Angry Young Hen Isn't." Fort Wayne
(Indiana) News-Sentinel. Hay 31, 1958, p. 4.
fjrreview of Tom Maschler, ed., Declaration,
New York, 192[1 .
"Beerbohm
(Indiana)
t A review
NeH York,

Collection is Praised." Fort Wayne
News-Sentinel. June 21, 1958, p. l.f.
of Max Beerbohm, Nainly on the Air,
195!].

"Eucene · O'Neill Seen throuGh His Wife's Eyes."
Fort Hayne (Indiana) Ne\vs-Sentinel, p. 4. CA
revieH of Agnes Boulton, Part of a Long Story,
Ne\v York, 195]].

•

Davis, Howard V.

Duncan, Robert

Tv.

Going, Hilliam T.

"Attitudes of Teachers on School Behavior Problems
Can De Changed." The Clearing House. Vol. XXXIII.
No. 1 (September, 1958), pp. l.f4-46.
"Hiss Hetzel's Nose," "The Lady is a Pilot,"
"~ Ne\·J Look at ~usiness Flying."
(short StorieD
A~r Facts.
Apr~l, July and August ,-1958, respectively.
"Faull~ner's 'A Rose for Emily.'"
The Explicator.
Vol. XVI, No. 5 (February, 1958). Item 27.

"Chronology in Teaching 'A Rose for Emily."'
Exercise Exchange. Vo 1. V. No. 3 (February,
1958) pp. 8-ll.
"Oscar Hilde and Wilfrid Blunt: Ironic Notes on
Prison, Prose, and Poetry." The Victorian Newsletter. No. 13 (Spring, 1958), pp.27-29.

• &gt;

�Articles:
Joost, Nicholas

"The Importance
Sir,ma Bulletin.

o~

Scholarship.'' Delta Epsilon
1958 Series (June, 1958), pp .2l~-30.

The Place of Fiction in a College Library . 11 The
Bay State Librarian.
(April, 1958), pp. 7-16 .

11

••

\Vhat Do Parents Say About Experimentation in Our
Schools ?11 Education. Vol. 78. No. 7 (March,
1953), pp. 406-408.

Jurjevich, Joseph C.

11

Kazeck, Helvin E.

"Climatic Data for Grand Forks . 11 Published
monthly in the Grand Forks, H. D., Herald.

Kilchenmann, Ruth J,

"Ein amerikanischer Beitrag zur Hesse-Forschung."
Der kleine Bund. Wgchentliche Literatur-und
Kunstbeilage des "BUND. 11 Bern (Switzerland),
15 Au3ust 1958, Seite 6.
II

Der Stil Hesses als Ausdruck seiner Personlichkeit. 11
Kentucky Foreign Language Quarterly. Vol. V, No. 2
(Second Quarter, 1958), pp. 95-99.

11

Knoepfle, John

"On the Passing of a Sterm1heel Tow, 11 11 Keelboatman's Horn, 11 "Little Harpe's Head, 11 and 11 Time's
Out" [loem~. Poetry. Vol. XCIII, No. 3
(December, 1958), pp, ll}7-150.

Kuenzli, Alfred E.

Remmers, H. H., and Radler, D. H. 11 The American
Teenager.'' Public Opinion Quarterly. Vol. XXII.
No. 1 (Spring, 1958), pp. 75-76 [.! reviewj.
Heyer, A. E., "Nind, Matter, and Morals. 11 The
Humanist. Vol. XVIII. No. S (September, 1958),
p . 317 ~~ review-T.

,.

Psychological Abstracts. Vol. XXXII (1958).
No. 1, p. 79; No. 3, pp. 201, 239, 290; No. 4,
pp. 309, 311, 317, 353, 364.
Logan, Harjorie

"Hemo to A New Teacher . 11 The School Executive.
Vol. 77. No. 12 (August, 1958), p. 55.
"A Hemo to Kay." Illinois Education.
No. 1 (September, 1958), p. 4.

Love 11 , S . D.

Vol. 47.

"Should the Property Tax Remain as the Leading
Source of Municipal Revenuc?t: Atlanta Economic
RevieH. Vol. VIII. No. 4 (April, 1958), pp. 12-17.

r.

�Articles:
Marks, Babette

"A Ne\·J Approach to Some Difficult Softball Rules."
Softball-Track and Field Guide. January, 1958 January, 1960. Washington: Division for Girls'
and Homen's Sports, 1958. pp. 37-40.

Hartin, Kenneth E.

"Ba1&gt;ic Business by the Experts." The Kansas
Bus i ness Teacher. Vol. XI. No. 3 (March, 1958),
pp. 3-9.

..
o.

11
Analysis of Legal Secretaryship." Business
Education Newsletter (December, 1958).

Rosenthal, Herbert H.

"The Cruise of the Tarpon," New York History.
Vol. XXXIX, No. 4 (October, 1958), pp. 303-320.

Steinkellner, Robert H.

"Are Texas Public Schools Selective?" Texas School
Board Journal. Vol . V, No. 2 (September, 1958),
pp. 10-12.

Taylor, Harion

"Hilliam Manchester, Beard the Lion," St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, August, 195G. ~ revie~· .

Harren, Ed\vin

"Life and Harks of Robert fayrfax." Musica
Disciplina. Vol. XI (1957-53), pp. 134-152.

r.

�•
••

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FEBRUARY 28,

1958

SERVICE~

-

VoL .1-4_ No .10

ILL ~

CoMPILED noNTHLY BY ]NFORHATION
S ouTHWESTERN
RESIDENCE OFFIC E, SouTHERN ILLINOIS UNTvERSITY~ FOR THE STAFF
~ERS OF THE RESIDENCE CENTERS~ THE NEWSLETTER IS NADE POSSIBLE BY THE COOPERATION OF STAFF NEHB ERS WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED
NEWS ITEJfS.

FA C' ULTY

NE · ?IS L E TT E R

Howard Davis, student affairs, Alton told the Junior Service League about
SIU last Thursday. Speaking at a noon luncheon at the Stratford Hotel, Howard
told the forty women present about the Center's offerings and general set-up.
The women in this organization take part in community servfce ··projects such
as the Easter Seal Drive and summer day camps for cerebral palsy children.

--------------------------------Chelsea Bailey, Technical and Adult Education, Southwestern Illinois Residence Office told the Highland Chamber of Commerce about "The Land of the Flying
Carpet" on February 5. Dr. John DeLaurenti, Superintendent of Highland Community
Schools, introduced Bailey.

Mary Wyatt, nursing, Carbondale-Alton, by this corning week will have addressed
every hospital in the Alton-East St. Louis area on SIU's supplemental program for
graduate nurses.

--------------------------------Babette Marks, physical education, Alton, has an article appearing in the
1958 Official Softball Guide, published by the Division for Girls' and Women's
Sports. Title: "A New Approach to Some Difficult Softball Rules."

---------------------------------At least eight SIU faculty members have invested in homes of their own in
the two-county area, according to unofficial reports. Next month's Newsletter
plans an up-to-date report on homes bought and abuilding.

---------------------------------(more)

�- 2 -

•

Er1·'c R • Ba ber, d"1rec t o r , Alton , headed a panel
of VIP's
last Monday at the
.
.
1
1
American Association of School Administrators n St. Lou s.
Invited b F" i E gleman of AASA Hdq. in Washington, D.C. to lead a two-hour
y 1n s n
"
b
·
d b
panel on "Practical Solutions to Discipline Problems, Dr. Ba er_was ass1ste
y:
Mr. James M. Patterson, Director of Field Services, Public Relat1ons Department,
Standard Oil Company, Chicago; Dr. Harley Lautenschlager, Lab School of Indiana
State Teachers College, Terre Haute; Dr. J. B. Johnson, Superintendent of A~to~
Public Schools; Mr. E. H. Schultz, Superintendent of Schools, Homewood, Ill1no1s;
Dr. R. M. Roelfs, College of Education, University of ~kans~s, Fayetteville~ and
Miss Adah Peckenpaugh , teacher of English, Clinton, M1ssour1, ~nd_past pres1dent,
Department of Classroom Teachers, Missouri State Teachers Assoc1at1on.
Held at the Statler Hotel, the panel drew an audience of 150 educators.

------------------------------Thirty women attended the first regular meeting of the Resid~nc·~ .. Centers'
Women's Club on February 20, according to Carma Davis, Alton, president of the
newly organized group.
Attending the meeting at the home of Geneva Peebles, Alton, were the following members of the Carbondale Chapter: Mrs. Amos Black, Mrs. Hellmut Hartwig,
Mrs. Roscoe Pulliam, Mrs. Willis Swartz, and Mrs. Max Turner, president of the
parent club.
Elsie Baber and Margaret Going, Alton, arranged the table. Betty Sturley,
Alton, scheduled a folk singer and a tour of the campus.
Present at a meeting of the Club's Gouncil last Tuesday were: Ruth Bailey,
Helen See, and Betty Spahn, Belleville; and Myra Bear, Carma Davis, Lucy McAneny,
Geneva Peebles, Norma Showers, and Betty Sturley, Alton.
Meeting in Belleville, the Council, headed by Carma Davis, laid plans for
the March and April meetings.
The March 13 meeting at the Broadview Hotel in East St. Louis will feature
a finger lunch and card party (11 : 00 a.m.-2:00p.m.). All faculty Homenstaff members as well as wives -- are cordially invited, President Davis announced
Wednesday. Plans include individual notification of each woman between now and
March 13.
Tentative arrangements for the April 17 meeting, also scheduled for the
Broadview Hotel, include an address by Dr. John W. Allen, Emeritus, Carbondale
Campus.
A family picnic is on the bill for May, to be held at some point midway
between the Centers. (Tentative plans by a campus wit to charter a river steamer
for the event have been dropped - ed.)

-----------------------------Plane spotters in the area have been making telephone inquiries recently
about an unidentified plane reportedly operating in the two-county area.
Coming from a southerly direction, the plane is said to circle certain
strategic crossroads and then head south again.
A usually reliable source on crafty movements refused to comment on the
movements of the craft in question except to suggest, when pressed, that it might
be looking for a good midway point to hold the May faculty picnic.

------------------------------(more)

�- 3 -

Leonard loJheat, graduate program, Alton, furnished Part II of the PTA program at East Jr. High School in Alton last Tu~sday.
Following pupil speakers who told the one-hundred pa:ent~ and teachers . present about the different pupil organizations, Dr. Wheat t~ed ~n the co-curr~cular
activities of the school with the program of social development of the pupils.
He stressed the fact that both the school and the home sho_uld provide ample opportunity for boys and girls to get together in normal social relationships.
At the junior high school age -- when boys and girls normally are not interested
in heterosexual social activities - they need a large number of '"idely varied
opportunities (such as those provided at East Jr. High School) for gaining _social
experiences which will help them learn to live together.
In January Dr. Wheat participated in a panel on the gifted pupil at the PTA
Council of Alton, and on March 11 he is scheduled to take part in a similar panel
at the Horace Mann School in Alton. On Harch 10 he is on the program at the Alton
High Schoo 1.

------------------------------Virgil Seymour, sociology, East St. Louis, was guest lecturer last month
at. St. Louis University, where he spoke on "Miniority Group Problems in East St.
Louis" at the Institute for Human Relations.
Three days before this he talked to the Social Action Committee of the
Evangelical and Reformed Church Synod on "Trends in American Family Life."
Place: St. Peter's Church in Granite City.
On March 10 he will speak at an evening Women' s· Club meeting in Fairview
on behalf of the Mental Health Center. Topic: "How Hature Are We?"

Carlyle Ring, director, East St. Louis, addresses the juniors and seniors
of Cahokia Commonfields on March S. On the school's Vocational Day Program
with a representative of St. Louis University, Dr. Ring will tell of the educational opportunities provided in this area by sru.
Next Tuesday Dr. Ring will present a "Comparison of American and European
Education" at Webster Jr. High School in Collinsville.
Dr. Ring visited many schools in England, France, and Germany in 1944-45,
and again in 1954, when he studied Danish schools as well.
---~-------------------------

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Southvvestern Illinois Residence Centers
Southern Illinois University

FACULTV

NEWS

BULLETIN

�DECEJ1BER_,

VoL. III_, No.3

1959

FA C ULTY

NE W S

Southern Illinois University's
SOUTHWESTERN ILLINOIS CAMPUS
SIU PRESIDENT VISITS CUBA .
President DELYTE W. MORRIS and his wife
spent the early part ·o f this month in Cuba
where Dr. Morris addressed Cuban educators
and laymen at the request of the U. S.
State Department.
Morris delivered the final address at a public forum which concluded a ' one-month Cuban
Educational Conference devoted to "integral
reform'' of the public school system of Cuba.
He showed the SIU film, "The Peep le' s University," at the consultation session.
"Public schools in a democracy must stay
close to the needs of the pe0ple," Dr.
Morris told his audience. "Rather than remain apart from daily living, the public
schools should so .entwine themselves into
the daily life of the communities about them
that ' they furnish intellectual leadership
and stimulate dynamic social growth.
"In a democracy schools must be citadels of
freedom to learn and freedom to .teach the
truth wherever it may lead . . . They must
also be free of political or religious dogma and free of economic or racial bigotry."
Pointing out that a society cannot rise
above the potential of the persons who make
up that society, Morris said that in a democracy each future citizen should have the
opportunity to develop skills and talents
and cultivate his intellect "to the outer
limits of his own capacities . . . Our
schools must, therefore, assume the responsibility of providing the learning experiences that will bring about maximum achievement of the individuals making up the democracy."
Morris continued by pointing out that "in a
democracy educators face the difficult task
of refraining from political propaganda and,

BULLETIN
Mildred Arnold, Editor
Broadview Hotel
Bridge 4-2100, Extension 5

at the same time, preparing students to
assume responsibilities of self government.
The vast world changes in our generation
are causing a reappraisal of many things
in our country. They have caused us, as
they are causing you, to reappraise, reevaluate and reorient public education .
It is my belief that our nation could not
exist as it is today had there not been from
the beginning a desire for universal free
education and the will to achieve it. That
our nation is not a perfect nation is due
to the fact that our educational system has
not been perfect. However, we have endured
and grown stronger as a democratic nation
because we have staked our democracy on the
belief that an enlightened electorate will
be able to govern itself."
Dr . and Mrs. Morris spent a week visiting
schools in Cuba and talking with educators
and government officials about schools. One
of the highlights of their visit was a
luncheon at the ambassador's residence.
ALONZO MYERS VISITS CAMPUS
Alonzo F. Myers, chairman of New York University's Department of Higher Education,
was on campus earlier this month reviewing
the progress of the Southwestern Illinois
Campus' program.
Three years ago community leaders in Madison
and St. Clair counties formed the Southwestern Illinois Council for Higher Education to promote better educational opportunities for the people of this area. Under
this organization's sponsorship and with
the financial backing of local industry, Dr.
Myers was hired to make a comprehensive
survey of the need for higher educational
facilities in the two-county region. In
December of 1956 he began a three-month
study and subsequently recommended that SIU

�- 2 -

open "residence" centers in Alton and East
St. Louis.
During his recent visit Myers consulted
with SIU staff members and members of the
Council and made recommendations to President Morris and Vice President HAROLD W.
SEE.

•

ALFRED G. HARRIS, librarian and assistant
professqr of history (Alton), spoke to the
Alton Area Historical Society December 13 on
"Edgar Allan Poe: a biographical and cri tical analysis on his sesqui-centennial anniversary."

ROBERT STEINKELLNER, education (East St.
Louis), spoke to the Parent-Teachers Association of the Webster Junior High School in
Collinsville on December 1. His topic,
FILL SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS
"Power of Work and Formal Education."
KERMIT G. CLEMANS (East St. Loui~ spoke to Steinkellner is program chairman for the
Webster Junior High PTA. On November 20, he
members bf the Alton Mathematics Club on
spoke to the Valmeyer School PTA in Waterloo
November 13. He discussed "Estimating
Weapon Effectiveness by Use of Probability." on "Hhat are the Purposes of a Formal Education?"
JOHN GLYNN, director, Alton center, discussed STU's responsibilities to the commu- DONALD TAYLOR, sociology (East St. louis),
nity at the annual ladies' night dinner of
spoke at the annual Christmas meeting of the
the Alton Rotary Club held November 30 at
Southern District of the Illinois Nursing
the Stratford Hotel. Other guests of the
Home Operator's Association. This meeting
Rotary Club that evening were Mr. and Mrs.
was held at the Jefferson Hotel, St. louis,
ERIC STURLEY, Mr. and Mrs. NICHOLAS JOOST,
on December 9. His topic was "What Makes a
Mr. and Mrs. DAVID BEAR, Hr. and Mrs. JOHN
Person Grow Old?"
SCHNABEL, WALTER BLACKLEDGE and HERBERT
ROSENTHAL.
"Juvenile Delinquency" was the topic discussed by JAMES TURNER when he spoke NovemIn his talk Glynn cited examples of service ber 11 to the Hi-12 at Collinsville. Turner
SIU is giving the community. "A universiis director of the East St. Louis center.
ty's main products," he said, "are the intangibles of truth and knowledge. It becomes, in fact, the custodian of truth and
TO EVALUATE CONFERENCE
knowledge, which it transmits from one generation to the next. Our raw material is
Serving as evaluator for a conference on
the mind of the student. Our finished pro- cerebral palsy, to be held in St. louis
duct is a university graduate who, we hope, February 1-3, 1960, will be MARK TUCKER,
is a better member of society after he has
special education (East St. louis). Tucker
completed university training--a member of
was invited by the National Education Assosociety who is aware of his responsibilities ciation to participate in a three-day conto himself, to other individuals, to his
ference dealing with the academically talfamily, to society. He is a graduate who
ented which was held November 19-21 in Wash~
has a thorough grasp of our \vestern civi li- ington, D. C. Held in conjunction with the
zation and our American culture. He has a
American Personnel Guidance Association,
respect for cultures other than his own,
efforts of the conference will be reflected
in a world made smaller by modern means of
in a publication entitled "Guidance of the
communication and transportation."
Academically Talented."
VERNON T.- HORNBACK addressed the second
meeting of the Athenaeum held December 9
in the Humanities Building at Alton. He
talked about the modern English novelist,
Graham Greene.

ATTENDED CONFERENCES
DEAN WILLIAM T. GOING attended the National
Council of Teachers of English, which met

�- 3 -

I

in Denver during the Thanksgiving holidays.
Highlights of the meeting included a discussion of mass communication led by Gilbert
Seldes, a debate on the abolition of freshman composition sparked by Warner Rice of
Michigan, and a luncheon, with addresses
by John Ciardi on poetry and Charlton Heston on BEN HUR.
DAVID VAN HORN, supervisor of placement
and student employment, attended the 26th
Annual Convention of the National Institutional Teacher Placement Association held
in Philadelphia from November 30 to December 3. Van Horn reports that 115 placement
officers from 80 universities and colleges
were in attendance. Among the distinguished
consultants at the conference were three
college presidents.
TO TAKE PART IN MLA MEETING
RUTH KILCHENMANN and NICHOLAS JOOST of
the Alton staff \vill take part in the
Modern Language Association meeting in
Chicago, December 27-29. Mrs. Kilchenmann
will read a paper in the Modern German
Literature section and discuss "Traum und
Wirklichkeit in den Werken Friedrich
Schnacks." Joost will participate in a
symposium, "Satire and the Modern Christian
Temper."
DAVIS ARTICLE PUBLISHED

I .

An article entitled "The Golden Anniversary
of Guidance" appeared in the autumn issue
of the Vocational Guidance Quarterly. Its
author is HOWARD DAVIS, director of student
affairs. Davis served as program chairman
and appeared on a panel at the East Alton
Public Schools in November. LEONARD WHEAT,
assistant to the dean for graduate studies, .
was chairman of the panel, which d r scussed
the matter of appraising the unit system in
the East Alton Public Schools.
KELLEY ARTICLE PUBLISHED
BETTY JO KELLEY of the education staff at
East St. louis is author of an article,

"Maps and Globes," which was carried in, the
December issue of The Instructor, national
teachers' magazine.
CONWELL ELECTED CHAIRMAN
'

STEPHANIE B. CONWELl has been elected chair•
man of the Education Administrators, Consultants, and Teachers Section of the Tenth
District, Illinois Nurses Association.
APPOINTED TO ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Appointed by the Alton Ministerial Association, KENNETH F. ESTEY is serving as arepresentative on the Youth Advisory Committee
of the Mayor's Commission on Human Relations.
"Its purpose is to set up a Youth Conference
on Human Relations," according to Estey,
lecturer in religious education.
APPOINTED TO GRADUATE COUNCIL
President Morris has appointed NICHOLAS
JOOST to the graduate council of SIU in
Carbondale, to represent the Southwestern
Illinois Campus. Joost is associate professor of English.
POLYLINGUAL LIBRARY
It is interesting to learn that several
different languages are spoken by members
of the library staff working at the Edwardsville site. The languages are Chinese,
Russian, Hebrew, Yiddish (dialect), French,
Portuguese, Spanish, Italian and, of course,
English.
MARK TUCKER NAMED KENTUCKY COLONEL
The governor of Kentucky, A. B. Chandler,
has named MARK TUCKER, special education
(East St. Louis), a Kentucky colonel "with
all the rights, privileges and responsibilities thereunto appertaining." The honor
was conferred November 18, 1959.

_?~
~

-

;-.. -":.:'-··

0
.!,

-l'f!i/1 I · ~ ~

I

�- 4 STRING ENSEMBLE HAS ACTIVE SEASON
A string ensemble organized and rehearsed
by LLOYD G. BLAKELY of the music faculty
at the Alton campus has had a very active
"season" this term. The group performed
October 13 for the Alton Civic Orchestra
Guild, November 3 before the music students
on the Alton campus, November 22 at a service of the First Unitarian Church in Alton,
December 9 for the Christmas program of the
Alton Civic Orchestra Guild and December 11
for the Alton Women's Council. In addition
to these performances, the ensemble is
taping a program to be heard soon over station WOKZ, Alton. According to Blakely,
this group will be glad to do a program
for University or University-related organizations, if there are no schedule conflicts.
REPRESENTED AT ART EXHIBITION
CATHERINE ESTELLE MILOVICH, East St. Louis
art staff, was represented in the St . Louis
Artists' Guild's Annual Art Section Exhibition during late November with a water
color painting. Mrs. Milovich is currently
represented in the Guild's exhibition at
the St. Louis City Art Museum with a recent water color painting. In addition,
there are several of her enamel pieces in
the museum shop.
TO CHAIR POETRY PANEL

•

candidates for 1960-61 awards from applicants
recommended by a screening committee. Rockwell came to this campus last fall from a
two-year Fulbright appointment in Turkey.
FINER FILMS PRESENTATION
On December 20 the Finer Films Committee of
the Alton campus will present its second
movie in the series--" Alexander Nevsky," a
Russian film with English sub-titles. The
time is 2:00 to 4:00p.m. in the chapel
auditorium. Students, faculty and townspeople are welcome. Price is 25¢.

MEMO FROM THE DESK OF THE DEAN
In the light of our discussions about the
recognition and rewarding of good teaching,
I believe you will be interested in two
paragraphs from Tomorrow's Professors.
This brochure has just been released by the
Ford Foundation, having been prepared for
the Fund for the Advancement of Education by
John S. Diekhoff:
"If a program of class observations is undertaken, the absolute sovereignty of the professor in his classroom seems to be challenged. Paul Klapper, commenting on this
academic attitude, pointed out that a surgeon is flattered when a colleague asks to
observe an operation and a trial lawyer
flattered if his legal confreres make a point
of observing his conduct of a case.

A member of the English staff at the East
"The professor is different. He publishes
St. Louis center, JOHN KNOEPFLE has been
his scholarship for his peers, writhes when
asked to chair the poetry panel to be held
he reads some reviews, and sends other rein June at the McKendree Writers' Conference.views to his president . The academic freedom of the scholar does not exempt him from
criticism. Surely the academic freedom of
TO HELP SELECT FULBRIGHTS
the teacher does not guarantee the right to
teach irresponsibly. But the suggestion that
A visiting professor of psychology at SIU's teaching is subject to criticism, or that the
Alton center has been asked to help select
professor can learn something about teaching
persons to serve as Fulbright lecturers
from his colleagues, or that his colleagues
and research scholars abroad. He is JOHN
can learn something about teaching from him,
ROCKWELL who will meet this month in Washor that a college teacher might modify his
ington with the subcommittee for Spain and
teaching habits if he watched his colleagues
the Middle East to hel~repare panels of
at work, becomes of some curious logic a
challenge to or a restriction upon his aca~\ ~\tl
demic freedom."--WTG

~~#~

�II

•

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£2.

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DECE11BER

1.:a,. 195 7

VoL.1,

No.8

CoNPILED HONTHLY BY ]NFORHATION SERVICE, S ouTHWE STE RN ILLINOIS
RESIDENDE OFFICE, SoU T HERN ]LLI N OIS UNIVERSITY, FOR THE STAFF
11E11BERS OF THE RESIDEN CE CENTERS, THE NEWSLETTER IS HADE POSSIB'LE BY THE COOPERATION OF STAFF J1E l1B E RS WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED
NEWS

I TEI1S •

F A C UL T Y

N E ll S L E T T E R

Robert w. Duncan, English, Alton, has appeared in Air Facts again, this
with a technical article. The November issue of the magazine carries as its
article Duncan's "Rapcon is My Co·- p·i l ot". (Rapcon stands for Radar Approach
trol, the new radar approach corttrol equipment to direct planes to the field
as far as 40 miles out. - ed.)

time
lead
Confrom

Carlyle C, Ring, director, East St. Louis, became an active member of the
.
East St. Louis Rot~ry Club Wednes&amp;ay,. December 11. He had been attending meetings
so regularly that all of the members knew him, and it was not necessary to present
him formally. Ring transferred from the Jamestown, New York, Rotary Club, which
he joined in 1937.
A First of .First's
Howard Davis' student affairs,. Alton, &lt;,lCtua.lly was the first SIU staff member
to have material publ i shed·
a scholarly journal with the Residence Center designation.
Howard has been keeping to himself the fact that he had an article published
in the Vocational Guidance Quarterly, Summer, 1957, entitled "This Piorieer was
Pretty Modern". In the · publication he is listed as a staff member of the Residence
Centers of Southern Illinois University.
Newsletter is glad to move Howard · to first place. Keep them coming!

tn

·.

The front office received a letterthis week (recommending a candidate for
a possible opening in the Residence Centers) · which contained the following paragraph: "He is capable of profound thought but rarely engages in it. He is somewhat insensitive to subtleties. He is well · suited for teaching. 11 (D6 you think
he got the job? - ed.)
Eric Avern Sturley, associate professor of math . at Allegheny Coll~ge, Meadville,
Pennsylvania, since 1947, assumes his new duties as associate professor of math at
the Alton Residence Center on January 2.
Sturley, who holds B,A. and M.A. degrees in math from Yale, took his doctorate
at Columbia in math education.
Born in England, he returned to Europe in 1932 for a year of study in GHttingen,
Germany, and he made six subsequent trips to the continent as a leader of travel groups.
1
He will live at 2707 College Avenue, Alton, with his wife and two daughters,
ages nine and six.

�- 2 -

SIU may have 3,000 resident students and a total of 5,300 students in Madison
and St. Clair Counties next fall, the SIU Board of Trustees was informed l.Jednesday.
Dean Harold TV. See told the Board that the largest enrollment increases are
expected in the fields of nursing education, in technical fields, in liberal arts
(with emphasis on science), and in an expanded graduate program. See said final
enrollment figures for the fall term this year showed 2,874 SIU students in the
area -- 1,873 taking credit work, 850 in the adult and technical education programs,
and 151 in conference type courses and short courses.
SIU may have as many as 3,100 student~ in credit courses at the Residence
Centers next fall, See declared, along with 1,400 in adult and technical education
courses, 300 registered for conferences and short courses, and 500 in extension
classes.
The Centers presently have a surprising concentration of students in mathematic$
and science courses. The number of graduate students has grown from 51 to 202 in the
past two years, including those at the Belleville Center which has been operating
since 1949.
Ninety-four per cent of the Residence Center students live within 35 miles
of their classes, although the student population represents 104 communities, 30
counties, and four states. Madison and St. Clair Counties account for 86 per cent
of the student body. Macoupin County is third in representation. Only 34 students
live outside Illinois.

Babette Marks and Norman Showers, physical education, Alton, accompanied by
three P.E. majors, attended the annual meeting of the Illinois Association for
Health, P.E., and Recreation in Chicago last week. (According to an unconfirmed
report, attributed to spiteful persons \vho don • t have talking dogs, Cathy Marks
took quite a shine to the kennel keeper and some of his charges during the three
days Babette was in Chicago; worse, she reportedly said in so many words that she
was not returning home voluntarily. Babette could not be reached today for verification of the report. - ed.)

Laurence McAneny, physics, Alton, attended the national meeting of the American
Physical Society in St. Louis, Missouri, November 29-30.
David VanHorn, assistant registrar, Alton, has sold his home in Parkville,
Missouri, and bought one in Alton. The VanHorns will move into their new home at
1405 State Street in Alton on December 21. Son, Albert, will be a first-quarter
freshman at SIU, Alton. Daughter, Cora Louise, is still in grade school.
Alonzo F. Myers of New York University will visit the Residence Centers on
Monday, December 16, to review the recommendations he made for their establishment,
to see how his recommendations have been implemented, and to make recommendations
for the future.

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                    <text>�APRIL-flAY,

VoL. IV, No.7

1960

NEWS

BULLETI N

Southern Illinois University
SOUTHWESTERN ILLINOIS CAMPUS

DIVISION HEADS NAMED
At its May 7 meeting the Board of Trustees approved the appointment of five
acting division heads for the Southwestern
Illinois Campus. The new heads who will
assume their duties July 1, are Kermit
G. Clemans, science; John J . Glynn, business; Nicholas T. Joost, humanities;
Cameron W. Meredith, education; and Herbert
H. Rosenthal, social studies . A division
chief for fine arts will be approved at
a later meeting of the board.
(With our new cover we are using a new
format inside . News items about faculty
members will be by divisions , Ed . )
BUSINESS DIVISION
An -article by ETHEL HALE BLACKLEDGE (A)
appears in the May issue of Business
Education World . The article was an answer to a problem regarding elimination
of various skill subjects, with the exception of shorthand and typewriting.
The editor has entered Mrs. Blackledge's
answer in a contest on the topic. Another
article by Mrs . Blackledge, "They Instruct
One Another," appeared in the May-June
i .ssue of Business Teacher. This article
resulted from an experiment in the Fall
quarter with a group of advanced business
education students. Each student was
given the opportunity to act as office
supervisor, giving instructions to potential secretaries and/or business educators , . .
WALTER BLACKLEDGE (A) took part in Career
Day May 5 at Southwestern Unit 9 High
School, Piasa . . .
MARY BRADY (A) and MR. and MRS. WALTER
BLACKLEDGE visited the Vocational Tech-

Mildred Arnold, Editor
Fangenroth Road
Edwardsville, Illinois
nical Institute and the Business Division
in Carbondale April 1, 2, and attended
meetings of the Committee for Business
Education in Illinois. Miss Brady also
attended a Springfield meeting of the Committee for Business Education in Illinois,
where she served as recorder for the first
session and as a member of the social committee . . . On April 22 and 23 Miss Brady
was in Bowling Green, 0., attending the
Community Resources Workshop Directors
Conference . She led one of the discussion
groups on the topic, "Evaluation After the
Workshop . " The conference was held in preparation for Commun~~ y Resources Workshops
which will be held this summer on some 30
college campuses throughout the country.
They are sponsored by the Iron and Steel
Institute of America. DAVID BEAR (A) and
Miss Brady will be director and assistant
director, respectively, of the workshop to
be held on the Alton Campus from June 20
to July 2 9 . , .
DANIEL B. BOSSE (A) and VIRGIL I. PINKSTAFF
(A) attended a conference March 31 through
April 2 at Bloomington, Ind . It was sponsored by the Indiana University School of
Business . Bosse and Pinkstaff sat in on a
seminar entitled "How Will We Market $200
billion of New Business in 1970?" The men
relate that while participating in an Executive Simulation Decision game they made
a net p~ofit of over one million .d ollars
in less than three hours . Unfortunately
for them, this was "all on paper . "
. LEO COHEN (E) has received word from
the editor of the National Tax Journal indicating that his article entitled'~ More
Recent Measurement of the Built-in Flexibility of the Individual Income Tax" has
been accepted for publication in either the
June or September issue of the journal . . •
Cohen spoke to the Breakfast Optimist Club
of East St . Louis on April 13 . His subject

�- 2 -

was "Some Misconceptions Concerning the
Prevailing Distribution of the Burden of
the Personal Income Tax."
· JOHN GLYNN (A) served as a judge
recently in an essay contest sponsored
by the American Association of Physicians
and Surgeons . . .
ROBERT McDANIEL (E) attended the Illinois
Business Association Conference at Springfield on March 24, 25, and 26 .
FINE ARTS
LLOYD BLAKELY (A) has been elected president of the Band and Orchestra Council
of the R-2 Schools (Ferguson-Florissant,
Mo . ). The new council represents the
16 schools within the district in assisting the instrumental music program . . .
KENWYN BOLDT (A) .and h .i s wife Frina played
• a one piano-four hand program for the Edwardsville Eastern Star installation ceremony on May 7 . On May 17 they will pre- sent a two piano recital at the Indiana
University School of Music in Bloomington.
This program will also be presented at
the Alton Center on May 20. The program
will include the Bach Concerto in C major,
Mozart's Sonata inC, .Carnival by Isadore
Freed, Rachmaninoff Waltz, Peer Gynt
Suite by Grieg, and Scaramouche Suite by
Darius Milhaud . . .
Call or write ROBERT HAWKINS (A) if you
are interest.e d in sub-letting a six-room
house from the middle of June to the end
of August . There are two bedrooms, a
large fenced-in yard, a garage, basement,
and study . Also available are an automatic washer ·and dryer. Only a ten-minute
drive from the Alton campus . .
HERROLD E. HEADLEY (A) is to be congratulated for the outstanding performances
the Southwestern Illinois Chorophonic
Society gave last month in .~'m'«s tr appearances with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra.
The St. Louis critics were . unstinting in
their praise of the choral group's performance of the "Ode to Joy" from Beethoven's

Ninth Symphony . "The chorus from the Southwestern Campus of SIU was well prepared by
its director," said Thomas B. Sherman in
the St . Louis Post-Dispatch . "Its singing in all stages of the finale was cokesive,
alert and vital in tone quality, but it de serves a special citation for coping with
the high tessitura . The sopranos held the
high A for eight or more measures with unfaltering firmness of pitch and brightness
of quality . " Critic F. A. Klein of the GlobeDemocrat said, "The chorus proved itself
capable not only of a ringing, full-throated
tutti, but also of a controlled and lyric
pianissimo, with excellent interplay of choirs .
It exhibited the results of close discipline
and awareness of what it was about . "
On April 4 Headley was the guest on Max
Steindel's weekly program for the St. Louis
Symphony which is carried by KFUO, St . Louis.
Steindel and Headley discussed Beethoven's
Ninth and the Chorophonic Society . Headley
was asked to explain the 12 tone system of
musical composition which one of Steindel's
listeners had request.e d . . .
On March 23 CATHERINE MILOVICH (E) spoke
at a dinner meeting of the Collinsville
Kiwanis Club . Her topic was "The Role of
Art Education . " From April 9 to April 14
Mrs . Milovich attended the Western Arts
Association Conference at Dallas, Texas,
where she participated on a panel concerned
with "Trends in Art Education for the Younger Child . . .
JOHN A. RICHARDSON (A) addressed the Alton
Woman.' s Council on the afternoon of April 8,
speaking on "The Viewpoint in Art . " That
evening he presented a 60-minute slide lecture, "The Theme of the Spectacle in Modern
French Painting." He attended the Western
Arts Association Conference in Dallas, .April
10-14.
EDUCATION
WILLIAM ~ANAGHAN (A) attended the American
Personnel and Guidance Association meetings
in Philadelphia April 11-17 . . . On April
7 he participated in the North Junior High
School Student Council Conference, discussing "People, Groups, and Productivity" at

�- 3 -

one of the morning sessions
Last month .DAVID BEAR (A) was elected to
the Alton School · Board, leading a ticket
of nine o The total vote registered was
the largest ever recorded in an Alton
election to name school board members o
Bear received 1,945 of the 4,325 votes
cast . .
0

H. BRUCE BRUBAKER (Ed) spoke April 12
at the convention of the Twenty-Second
District, Illinois Feder.ation of ·women.• s
Clubs. He discussed the impending bond
issue
REGAN CARPENTER (A) has accepted a request from the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction to meet with
the Advisory Committee for Junior College
Development in Illinois . .
STEPHANIE CONWELL (A) acted as a judge
for the East St. Louis Exchange Club
• Nursing Scholarship Contest . o . From
May 1 through May 7 she attended the American Nurses Association biennial con• vent ion in Miami, Fla. . . .
HOWARD V. DAVIS (A) has been appointed
state coordinator for the American Personnel and Guidance Association . .
Davis spoke April 21 on "Financial Aid
to College Students 11 at the Collinsville
High School Parent-Teachers Association
. . o Last month 1 s SWIC 1 s director of
student affairs was elected to the East
Alton-Wood River Community High School
Board of Education . . .
0

JAMES ~. DIEKROEGER (E) spoke April 27
at Assumption High School 1 s . Career Day
on the objectives and opportunities of
physical education . . .
A highly successful Elementary Principals•
Conference was held on the Alton campus
April 23 o DAVID E. BEAR (A) was chairman
and served also as a consultant and resource person. On hand to welcome the
participants was Alton•s Director JOHN
J. GLYNN o Other SWIC staff members taking
part were LEONARD WHEAT (A), who served
on one of the panels as a consultant and

resource person; BETTY JO KELLEY (E), panelist and chairman of the Evaluation of
Pupil Growth and Reporting to Parents Group;
and LAWRENCE TALIANA (A), REGAN CARPENTER
(A), and CAMERON MEREDITH (A), who were consultants and resource persons for the conference.
BABETTE MARKS (A) has been elected recording
secretary of the St. Louis Board of Women
Officials
Miss Marks attended the
annual meeting of the Illinois Association
for Professional Preparation in Health,
Physical Education and Recreation which
was held at Pere Marquette State Park in
Marcho She was a member of the committee
on evaluation and curriculum o
0

•

0

Child Guidance Through Family Counseling 11
was the topic discussed by CAMERON MEREDITH
(A) at the annual meeting May 1 of the Cooperative Nursery School • . o He spoke
to more than 200 persons April 25 at the
Allied Professions dinner sponsored by the
Occupational Nurses Association. His topic
was 11 Improving Human Relations 11 o o o
Meredith was featured speaker at a conference of Mesa County Valley Teachers in
Grand Junction, Colo. , April 14. While in
Colorado he addressed a luncheon meeting
of the Kiwanis Club and a dinner meeting
of the Rotary Club. .
11

More than 400 persons attended a bowling
clinic for the Alton area on April 3, reports NORMAN SHOWERS (A) who assisted with
the clinic o Held at the Alton Bowl Haven
Lanes, it was sponsored by the Bowling
Proprietors As.sociatio ,; of America o Three
top bowling stars were present .
Principal speaker at the Madison County
School Administrators meeting April 28
at the Highland Elementary Community Unit,
Highland, was lWBERT STEINKELLNER (E) o He
spoke on controversial issues in the teaching of reading and other language arts o'
His talk was called 11 The 4 L. A. 1 s versus
the 3 R 1 s o11 On May 16 he will appear
before the Lindburgh Community Teachers
, Association, St. Louis, to discuss 11What
are the Purposes of a Formal Education. 11
. LAWRENCE TALIANA (A) attended the

�- 4 Midwes t ern Psychologica l Ass ociation meet ings held April 28-30 a t t he Chase -Par k
Plaza Ho t el in St . Louis • . . On May 4
he gave t he keynote addres s a t Bell ev il l e
Junior High School's secon d annua l Car eer
Day . The following day he a ddressed t he
college-bound junior s an d seni or s of
Southwestern High Schoo l at Pias a . . .
Previously unrepor t ed in t h i s bul l et i n
was the fact t hat Taliana a t t ended a
meeting of the Illino i s Psychologi cal
Associa t ion on March 26 . Th e mee ting
was for school psycho l og i s t s an d t he
topic concerned "The Dia gnos i s of Lea rn ing ,Difficul t ies."
HUMANITIES
JOHN ADES (A) , CHARLES PARI SH (A) , ROBERT
DUNCAN (A), and MILTON BYRD (E) a t t ended
a t wo - day session of t he Midwes t Moder n
Language Associa t ion hel d l a s t mont h at
the University of Kans a s i n Lawr en ce .
Two pap.e rs were read, one by Ades , " Temp ta t ion i n Comus and Parad ise Re ga i n ed,"
and one by Pa rish, "Matt&gt;h.ew Arnold' s
Touchstone Theor y."
. . . The recently published Bi b liographical Guide to t he St udy o f Lit er a t ur e of
the U. S.A. lists Publicat i on Gu i de for
Litera ry and Lin guis tic Schol ar s by MILTON
BYRD (E) an d Arnold L. Goldsmith a s a
valua ble volume under t he h ea d ing, "Prep arat ion of Manuscripts f or Pub l i cat i on."
. . . Recen t ly EDWIN A. GRAHAM (E) received his doc t .o rat e in En gl i sh f rom
Princeton Un i versi t y .
NICHOLAS JOOST (A) wa s inv it e d by t he
na t ional president of Del ta Eps i l on Si gma
to at tend t he annual meeting o f the s o- ·
ciety in Chicago, Apr il 20 - 21. All pa s t
president s of t he societ y wer e i nv i t ed
to attend t he luncheon h eld a t t he St ockyard Inn as special gues t s of DES . J oos t
was national president f or two t er ms . At
present he i s edit or of t he f raterni t y's
Bulletin , wi t h a circulat ion o f 5, 000
• . • On April 30 Joos t a t tended the
second annual mee t ing of t he Johns on Society of t he Grea t Lakes Re gion wh ich was

held at John Carro ll Univ er si t y, Cl eveland.
He read a group o f t hre e paper s on "Leg i ti mi s t vs . Cons ervatism: Dryden , Swif t ,
Pope, and J ohnson " . . . Thus far in 1960
Mr . Joos t has ha d four pa per s publ i shed
or in press : "A Centur y of Religious Verse,"
Per spe c t i ves (Ja nuar y 1960 ), reprin t ed from
DESB; "What My Orphic Poe t s Sang," Modern
Age (Spr i ng 196 0); and a review of Ra e
Blanchar d ' s ed it i on o f four periodica ls by
Sir Ri char d St eel e , Modern Philology (May
1960 ) . Joos wa s r e cently elec t ed t o t he
boar d of d ir ec t or s o f Rena scen ce . . .
ROBERT SAlTZ (E) was a gues t on the las t
pro gram i n t his yea r 's Changing Wor ld
seri e s wh i ch wa s t el ecas t April 18. The
t h eme wa s "Lan gua ge i n Flux. " Sait z d i s cus sed s t r uc t ura l gr ammar . . •
GLADYS STEI NMAN (A) has been named one of
t he book r eviewer s of t he St . Loui s Pos t Dispat ch . She will s ubs ti t ute f or MARI ON
TAYLOR (A) whil e t he l a tt er i s on leave of
a b sence i n I ndia , wher e she will t each as
a Fulbri gh t l ec t ur er . . . Mrs . Taylor
ha s p l a ced a f ar ce wi t h t he Wa l t er Baker
Company and t he I nt ernat iona l One-Act Play
Thea t re of London. The name of the f_arc.e
is "Men' s J obs f or Women . " . . . Mrs .
Taylor 's t rav el book on Japan , published in
i n England and ca ll e d "Ameri can Geisha': is
b eing r e -issued i n London as a "cheap edi t i on . " Th e book ca me ou t or i gina lly i n 1956
On Apr il 13 Mr s . Taylor gave a n illus t rat e d lec t ure on J a pan b e fo r e t he
At h ena e um . . .
RUTH KI LCHENMANN (A) a ddr essed t he t ea chers
meet i ng of Un i t 100 i n J er seyv i lle on Mar ch
30 . She r e l a ed h er exp eriences with t he
Foreign Langua ges i n El ement ary Schools
(FLES) pro j e c t s i n t he Al t on area . Appear ing
with h er wa s Dr . Rober t 0 . deVe t t e , cons ul tan t, For e i gn La ngua ge Ti t le III , Nationa l
Defens e Educa t i on Ac t , a ff il i at ed wi t h t he
Of f i ce of t he Sup.e rint endent of Publ i c I n s t r uc tion , Spr ingfi el d . Dr . deVe t t e v is it ed
t he Al ton Campus on Apri l 11 and t he differ en t FLES pr oj ec t s wh i ch a r e taugh t by Mrs .
Ki lchenmann . . . On Apr il 12 one of her
s t uden t s pr esent ed a German pr ogr am t o t he
Par ent-Teachers Ass ociat i on , Wa shingt on School,
Al ton . The pr ogr am was i n t r oduced and ex-

�- 5 -

plained by Mrs . Kilchenmann , . , On April
19 she addressed the PTA of Irv ing School,
Alton , Her t op ic , "Th e Elementary Schoo lage is t he Bes t Age t o Learn to Speak a
Language," 'N"as followed by a program presen ed by an elementary l anguage cl a ss
under her sup ervision , On April 26 t he
same class a ppeared before he PTA of
t he Sou t h Roxana School . On May 2 Mr s .
Kilchenmann s poke at a progr am at Ros ewood Height s School in which e l ementary
cl a sses under her supervision appeared .
On t he las t program o f t his year 's Changing Wor ld series she and two o f her s t u dents, and 12 of t heir s tudents from
Horace Mann Elementary School , Alton,
demons trat ed cur rent met hods of t eaching
language .
, . . WINSLOW SHEA (A) d id the commentary
on the 49-minut e film shown on The Changing World series April 4 over KETC- 9 . The
film was entitled "The New Age in Archit ecture . "
SCIENCE
HAROLD E. BROADBOOKS (A) t ook part in a
zoology seminar a t Carbondal e on Apri l 12 .
He discussed t he pika, an anima l resembling the guinea pig and found in Nor t hern
America and Asia
"Scienc e in our Lives" was t he title o f
an a ddress given April 12 in Edwar dsv ille
by WILLIAM SHAW (E). The occas ion was a
recogni tion dinner for Edwar dsvill e s t udents who plac ed first at a dis t ric t
science f a i r at Jacksonville on April 9.
The dinner meeting was sponsor ed by t he
local Lions Club , • .

DAVID RANDS (E) and h i s family have moved
fr om Kirkwood , Mo., to 655 Bur roughs Avenue, Collinsville, Ill. Their new t elephone numb er i s Di ckens 5- 0604 . . .
ERI C STURLEY (A) s poke to the Edwardsv i lle
Hi gh School mathematics cl ub April 6, discus sing "Job Opportuni ties in Mathemat ics . "

SOCIAL STUDI ES
The geographe s - -MELVIN KAZECK (A), PHILIP
VOGEL (A), J OHN SNADEN (E), and MARY MEGEE
(E)--att ended the national mee tin gs o f t he
American Ass ociat ion o f Geographer s at
Dallas , Texas, from April 18 to April 21.
Snaden present ed a pap er ent i t led "Changing
Land Use Patt erns of Cahokia, I llino i s- -The
Res idential Period 1950 -1 969 . " It is t he
outgrowth of his urban r esearch in t his area .
Miss Megee read a pap er, "The Measurement
of the Industrial Charac t er of an Ar ea. "
Her s t udy was an out growt h of field work in
La t in Ameri ca which culmina t ed her Ph . D.
disser tat ion at the Univer s ity of Chica go .
The la tt er , "Mon t erey, Mex ico--Int erna l
Patt erns and External Relations , " was pub lished recently by t he Univ ersit y of Chi ca go
Pr ess . .
Late l a s t month STANLEY KIMBALL (A) t ook
part in h e 22d annual Public Affairs Conference sponsored by The Principia College.
He was accompanied by four social s t udies
s t udent s who t ook part in pane l d i scuss ions.
They were hear d over WOKZ April 16 • . . The
periodical, "The Improvement Era ," will carry
an article by Kimbal l in i t s Augus t i ssue.
It i s ent itled "The Columbia Profess or and
t he Book of Mor mon, Pa r t II. "

GEORGE ARNOLD (E) will teach physic s full
t im.e t h i s summer at Wa s hington Un i ver s ity

• KURT GLASER (A) has been elected vice
president of t he Rosewood School 's ParentTeacher s Associa ion

. . . JOSEPH S. DAVIS (E) rea d a paper
April 22 a t t he Iowa Academy o f Science
at Iowa Ci t y . The t i le was "The Effec t
of Bicarbonat e Ion Concentration on Cell
Orient ation of Pediastrum. " • . • Da v i s
recently received his doctorate in botany
f r om t he St a t e Univers ity of Iowa . • .

SEYMOUR MANN (E) attended the National Conference of t he American Soc i e t y for Public
Adm·i.nis t ration. The conference wa s held in
Los Angeles Cal i f ., April 12, 13, 14. While
in Lo ~ Angeles Mann took part in specialized
sessions conduct ed by t he hea ds of univer si t y
bur eaus of government resear ch .

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HYMAN FRANKEL (A) attended the Institute
on Juvenile Delinquency in Kansas City
April 29-30 and May 1-2. He participated
in panel discussions on each of those days
On April 8 he attended a meeting of
the National Association of Attorneys General held in Chicago . . . Frankel has
been granted a year's leave of absence
to spend a year in New York City, beginning in mid-June, to head .a "national research and information clearing center
on crime and delinquency." It will be
set up by the National Probation and
Parole Association, with a grant from the
Rockefeller Brothers 1 Fund .
GUNTER REMMLING (A) has been invited by
the American Sociological Association to
read a paper on his research project,
"The Age of Suspicion." He will present
it in the s.ection on the Sociology of
Knowledge and the Sociology of Science
during the annual national meeting in
Septemb.er . . . On April 3 ·he discussed
"Jazz in West Germany" on the Alton
radio station. The subject matter was
interpreted with reference to the sociological and ideological significance of
this medium. Hyman Frankel was moderator
of ,the program . . . On April 21, 22,
23 Remmling attended the meetings of the
Midwest Sociological Society . held in St.
Louis . • .
VIRGIL SEYMOUR (E) spoke on the bond
issue at the March meeting of the TwentySecond District, Illinois Federation of
Women.' s Club board meeting . . .
April 19 meeting of the
Guest speaker at the /Edwardsville Kiwanis
Club was DONALD TAYLOR (E). The occasion
was the club's spring fellowship meeting.
Taylor discussed "Merits of the Family."
REPORTS OF ILLNESS AND DEATH
A number of hospitalizations and two
deaths have occurred recently within
the SWIC FAMILY. Sympathy is sincerely
extended to JOHN KNOEPFLE (E) on the
sudden death of his brother, Father
Rudolph J. Knoepfle, and to SEYMOUR MANN
(E) on the loss of his grandfather, Hyman

Julius, who died early this month .
KAY BISHOP, wife of MYRON BISHOP (A), is a
patient in Barnes Hospital, St. Louis. Her
room number is llll . . • CATHERINE GLYNN,
wife of Alton's director JOHN GLYNN, is a
patient in St. Anthony's Hospital. Her room
number is 212 .
We are glad to report that UNA CORNWELL,
chief library clerk (Ed) and wife of CLIFTON
CORNWELL (E), has returned to her work at
the central library after surgery in the
Kirksville, Mo., Osteopathic Hospital "
DOLORES KILLINGSWOR'rH, secretary to the
East St. . Louis director JAMES TURNER,
is back at work after a recent illness.
Dolores was confined to St. Mary's Hospital
for a time. We're glad you are back.
DELYTE WESLEY MORRIS, 33°
The following article on SIU's President
Morr_is appeared in the April issue of NewsLetter, official publication of The Supreme
Council, Thirty-third Degree Ancief?,t Accepted Scottish Rite, Northern Masonic
Jurisdiction, U.S.A.
Carbondale Normal 11 a one-town teachers'
college surrounded by vast areas of in~
difference," located on a small city block
in Carbondale, Illinois, has become Southern
Illinois University with 3722 acres to continue growing in.
The dramatic story of mushrooming Southern
Illinois University was related in six
columns by Jack Rice, staff correspondent
of the St. Louis Post Dispatch, on January
30, 1960. Said he, "For ll years Southern
Illinois University, a do-good institution
guided by a do-it now president, Delyte
Wesley Morris, has made an art of explosion.
There are no indications that either the
University or Morris intends to quiet down."
President Morris, former director of the
Speech and Hearing Clinic at Ohio State
University, said : 11 I came here frankly
with one thought in mind.--that this was a
new opportunity to .build a new kind of
institution . This area is my home and I
had thought that this institution was not

�- 7 -

doing wh.at it could and what it ought to
do."
Ill. Brother Morris h.a s raised academic
standards at Southern and strengthened the
faculty by attracting younger men, offering them a more liberal opportunity than
they could expect at universities more
settled in routine and seniorities. Outstanding men, retired by leading universities but not ready to quit, are invited
to spend one or two years as resident
celebrities on the Southern faculty.
It
has not been unusual for a Southern list
to include a half-dozen former presidents
and deans of major universities.
Ill. Brother Morris was created an Honorary
Member of the Supreme Council in 1958 and
is highly esteemed by the \!alley of East
St. Loui.s , Illinois.

To join see Morris Carr at Alton or Lloyd
Hubert at East St. Louis, or call Joe R.
Small, Ext . 44, East St. Louis.
INDUSTRIAL AND TECHNICAL NEWS
SWIC's Industrial and Technical Program received its fa~~t national recognition on May
2 when E. R. CASSTEVENS (Ed), supervisor of
the program, participated in the national
convention of the American Societyof Wrain ing
Directors. He presented to the Ferrous
Metals Group his course on Coaching and Coun seling . The course was developed especially
for Granite City Steel Company arid has been
presented to five different classes of their
middle management people. It deals with t he
development of managers through on-the-job
coaching and periodic appraisal. Casstevens
was also on the program May 3 as chairman
of a session entitled "Removing Writers
Cramps."

SWICSIU CREDIT UNION RlPORT
During the month of March the SWICSIU
Credit Union .added six to its membership:
Ronald Oursler, son of CLELLIE OURSLER (E),
WILLIAM SHAW (A), DAVID RANDS (E), S. D.
LOVELL (E), and Mr. and Mrs. DIMITER
WASSEN (A). Additional shares were purchased in the amount of $748, bringing the
total shares purchased to $1,978. Loans
to members approved during the month were
in the amount of $400, with an additional
loan of $200 pending on April 1. There
are now 36 members; $1,450 loans outstanding, and $2,178 on deposit.
Balance Sheet
March 31, 1960
Cash in Bank
Savings Account (4%)
Loans to Members (two)
Total Assets

$1,052 . 00
500.00
400.00
$1,952.00

Shares Purchased (27 members)
Entrance Fee
Organization Expenses
Net Equity

$1,978.00
6.75
32.75
$1,952.00

ATTEND AAUP MEETING
NEDRA REAMES (E), MILTON BYRD (E) and S . D.
LOVELL (E) attended the annual mee ting of
the American Association of Universi t y Professors held in Detroit April 8-9. The
meeting included an extensive repor t of the
Committee on the Economic Status of t he
Profession, in which average 1959-60 salar ies
for the various ranks were reported by
geographic sections and by types of ins t i tutions. The reporting institutions were
rated on a grading scale of simple let t er
grades (AA, A, B, C, D, E, F). Hundreds of
colleges and universities are included i n the
lists but SIU salaries are not included in
the ranking because permission to publish
was not granted . The spring issue of t he
AAUP Bulletin includes the Economic Committ ee
report . The summer issue will include t he
final report of the committee . . . In
other actions by the AAUP, the organizat ion
reaffirmed its disapproval of t he affidavi t
section of the National Defense Education
Act of 1958 and urged Congress t o repeal it .
After discussion of committee repor t s con cerning cases involving academic freedom

�- 8 -

and tenure, the meeting took action
censoring certain college administrations
and removed censorship from others. The
meeting looked with . "sorrow and indignation"
upon the action of college authorities who
have taken disciplin;1ry action against
students protesting racial segregation. The
AAUP reiterated its stand in support of
the right of every teacher to be active
in organizations which exert their influence toward educational opportunity
without racial .segregation.

Bliss received his doctorate in secondary
education from the University of Nebraska,
where he wrote his dissertaion on the
Identification and Evaluation of Major
Principles of Supervision in Selected
Schools in the North Central States . He
taught from 1945 to 1957 in the public
schools of Nebraska and from 1957 to 1959
at the University of Nebraska . Last
September he went to the University of Omaha
as an assistant professor and will come to
SIU as assistant professor of education.
STUDY TOUR OF MEXICO

NEW STAFF APPOINTMENTS
Four new staff members have been appointed
to teach at the Southwestern Illinois Campus. Two of them, CLARENCE E. VINCENT and
RICHARD J. MILLES, have b.e .e n .a ssigned to
the Alton Center; ALLAN J. McCURRY and
GORDON C. BLISS have been assigned to East
SL Louis.
• Vincent received B. S. and M.B . A. degrees
from Indiana University and expects con:ferral of his doctorate in marketing this
year. He will be an assistant professor
of marketing.
Milles, a certified public accountant,
Missouri, holds B.S.C. and M.S.C. degrees
in economics and business administration
from St. Louis University. He began his
teaching career in the School of Commerce
and Finance in St. Louis University's
evening :division in 1943, and started
teaching day classes and graduate classes
there in January 1947. Much of his teaching has been in addition to his work as a
certified · public accountant. He has been
teaching evening classes since September
1959 at the SIU center in Alton, where
he will be an associate professor of accounting.
McCurry holdsM.A. and Ph.D. degrees from
Cornell University an,d a bachelor's degree
from Dartmouth College. He has taught at
the University of Chicago, and since 1953
has been an associate professor at Butler
University. A specialist in the early
n.a tional period of American history, he
will be an associate professor of history.

SWIC will sponsor a field trip and study
tour of Mexico this summer. Students will
tour Mexico from June 15 until July 6 and
will study Mexican geography, including
landforms, climates, soils, vegetation,
transportation, and economic activities.
The course is Geography 450-8, Travel Study
Course, Mexico, and can be taken for eight
hours of either undergraduate or graduate
credit. The trip will be offered to 38
persons on a priority basis. A $225 charge
includes transportation by air-conditioned
Greyhound bus, tours, tourist card, 'tuition,
lodging, and some meals. MARY MEGEE (E)
will direct the tour.
SEE ADDRESSES TRI-CITIES CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
SWIC's Vice President HAROLD' W, SEE addressed
a Chamber of Commerce dinner given April 21
for the Illinois State Advisory Board of the
Division of Industrial Planning and Development. The dinner meeting of the Tri-Cities
Chamber was held in Granite City. In his
talk See recommended twelve factors for a
better integrated residential, business,
and industrial community. "If we bring
together all of the positive factors of our
area we will--if we're not afraid to make
big plans--become one of the greatest industrial, education, and residential developments in the Midwest," See told his audience.
YOU AND SIU
Roughly 1,000 persons from Madison and St.
Clair counties attended YOU and SIU Night
at Edwardsville April .26. Sponsored by

�- 9 the Edwar dsville Lions Cl ub, t he mee t ing
featured t alks by DELYTE W. MORRI S ,
president of SIU, and HAROLD W. SEE ,
executive v i ce president of SWIC o The
school•s con cer t band under t he dir ec t ion
of C. DALE FJERSTAD (E), which made i t s
first off-campus appearance a t that time,
received excelLent reviews . President
Morri.s pa id tribute t o t he achievemen t s
to date of in.d ividua ls and organizat ions
working t oward the developmen t of a great
university in sou t hern I llinois o He
commended t he foresigh t of t he communities
in placing t he common good befor e fac t ional
interests by provid i ng an adequat e cent ral
university campus si t e in sout hwestern
Illinois. He t old his audience tha t t he
university facility here is being planned
specifically t o serve t he new t ype of
metropolitan area developing i n t he area-one spread over a great deal of t erri t or y
and geared t o the automobile . He predicted tha t t he central force of a university would serve to unify t h i s mul t iplicity
of communi t ies o 11 I know of no ot her
university which has planned a campus from
th.e beginning with the scope of this one, 11
he said . 11Mos t o t her campuses t oday are
suffering f r om a l a ck of foresight. 11 The
President invited the people t o t ake part
in planning t he new campus, and he urged
that the problem of zoning be worked out
early to the best interes t s of everyone
concerned . He called a t t ent ion t o the
bond issue for universi t y 'buildings
scheduled for the November elec t ion, which
--if passed --would make it possible for
the development of the new campus t o begin
within a mat ter of months. He pointed
out that t he campus would have to be
developed in any case because of the great
need for i t , but t hat development would
be much slower if t he bond issue is not
passed .
MYRON BISHOP spoke May 10 t o a luncheon
·ni!eeJtin:g ·af t he Edwardsville - Collinsville
Real Estat e Boar d . He discussed the land
acquisition program for the Edwar dsville
campus , br i nging t hem up to da t e on the
number of a cres purcha sed and advising
them how t he lan d already pur chased is
being used o In h i s ta lk Bishop pointed
out t hat none of t he land is idl e ; it is

being used t o house some of t he cent r a l
off i ces of SWI C, and eight people ar e
farming t he r es t of t he ar ea o The lar ges t
f arm is 400 a cr es , he s aid , t h e second
l arges t about 350 . The rea l t or s were
briefed on changes be i ng ma de i n t he r oa ds
on t he s it e and t he under gr ound cables t ha t
have been la i do
SWI C ARTICLE TO BE PUBL I SHED
' An ar t icle on t he Sout hwes t er n I ll i no i s
Campus wi ll a ppear in t he May issue of
AAC News, na t i ona l maga zin e of t he American
Alumn i Counci l o AAC comprises r epresentat ives f r om more t han 850 coll e ges and universi t ies in t he Unit ed Stat e s and Cana da, as
well as 110 priva t e secondar y schools and
15 na t iona l educa t iona l or ganiz a t ions o The
a r t icle wa s wri tt en by MI LDRED ARNOLD (Ed)
who i s t r ea sur er o f t he Grea t Lakes Dis t rict
of AAC o
FACULTY WOMEN 1 S CLUB NEWS
A business meet i n g and coffee hour scheduled
for Thursda y mor n i ng , May 19 , at 9 : 30,
will be held a t t he Coll i nsville Amer ican
Legion Club o Member s ar e urged t o at t end.
There will be elec t ion of off i cer s and
vo t ing on pr oposed amen dmen t s o
The annua l spring picn i c for members of
the Facul t y Women•s Club an d t he ir fam i lies
will be he ld Sat ur day , May 21 , a t Co ll i nsville Ci ty Par k . The t i me i s 5 : 30 p . m.
Br i ng a ho t dish and a s a l a d or desser t .
Single fo l k, bring p ickles , ol i ves, potat o
chips or a desser to Coffee, a c old drink
and gar lic br ea d wi ll be fur nished by t he
commi tt ee , whose chair man i s MRS. KERMIT
CLEMANS . Br ing your own t ab l e ser v i ce .
Ot her member s of Mrs . Cl eman s• commi tt ee
are MRS . GERALD RUNKLE, MRS . MYLLAN SMYERS ,
MRS . DONALD L. TAYLOR and MRS . ASSEN
KRESTEFF . The map on t he following pa ge
should help you i n r ea ching Coll i nsv i lle
Ci ty Park .

�•

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                    <text>South1Nestern Illinois Residence Centers
Southern Illinois University

FACULTV

I

I

i

NEWS

BULLETIN

�ilPRILJ_,

VoL •.

1959
FACULTY

NEWS

II~

No •. 6'

BULLETIN
Mildred Arnold, Editor
Room 227, Broadview Hotel
Bridge 4- 2100, ext. 3

SEE BECOMES TIIIRD SIU VEEP
It happened on April l--our Executive
Dean's promotion to Vice President of
the Southwestern Illinois Campus of
Southern Illinois University. His staff
in the Broadvieu became very excited Hhen
news of his promotion was telephoned by Ed
Hasse of Information Service, Carbondale.
It is a well-deserved promotion, as anyone who has seen him at work will tell
you. His enercy, his loyalty, his enthusiasm and his ideas are boundless.
Here He should like to quote in its
entirety an editorial which appeared in
the April. 5 edition of the Sunday Journal,
East St. Louis: "The elevation of Dr.
Harold See to a vice presidency of Southern
Illinois University is a development ~-1hich
should encourage advocates of higher education facilities in this area.
"Dr. See han been with us in this
community since the inception of SIU residence centers in East St. Louis and Alton.
~.J'e have watched him progress from the traditional academic approach to the problems
of his adopted community to the more practical realization of those problems. This
is not to be considered criticism of the
academic approach; rather, it is to credit
Dr. See with the ability to realize that
he was and is de aline ~-1i th a community of
hard realistn \-lhose life is dictated by
hard-core industrialist problems.
"This ability han enabled him to meet
many problems arising area-wise which many
another educator Hould have found insurmountable.
"For that reason, SIU could not have
selected a better qualified man to assume
the directorate of hir;her education in the
area. We might conclude this observation
with the hope that Dr. See will continue to
enlarge upon his education in community
realism."

FIVE NE\V APPOINTMENTS ANNOUNCED
Southern Illinois University's Board
of Trustees has approved five new
appointments to its Southwestern Illiaois
Campus. All five uill assume their duties
with the opening of the next academic year,
September 2 3.
\valter L. Blackledge, currently
associate professor at St. Joseph's College in Indiana, has been named professor
of business management. · Blackledge, \-7ho
holds doctorates in both philosophy and
jurisprudence from the State University
of Iowa, \vill be located on the Alton
campus.
Gerald J. T. Runl~le, who will teach
at East St. Louis, hac been named associate professor of philosophy. Runkle,
now an associate professor at Doane College in Nebraska, received his Ph.D.
degree from Yale University.
David G. R~nds, research chemist
with Monsanto Chemical Company, St. Louis,
will serve at the East St. Louis center
as assistant professor of chemistry. He
received his Ph.D. decree from the University of Iowa.
Named associate professor of economics
' for the East St. Louis campus, Leo Cohen
will come to Southern from Kansas State
College. He received his Ph.D. from the
University of California at Los Angeles.
Charles Parish 'comes from the University of \.J'ichita (Kansas) where he is
assistant professor of English. Parish
will fill the same capacity at Alton.
He received his doctorate in philosophy
from the University of New Mexico.
WHEAT ADDRESSES GROUPS
On March 19 Leonard B. \Vheat addressed
the Wood River chapter of the American

�- 2 -

•

Association of University \.Jomen on the topic
"Shall \\Te Separate School Pupils According
to Innate Ability?" On March 25 he spoke
to the teachers and school administrators
of the Panhandle Unit District at Raymond,
Illinois, on "Harking Systems and Reports
to Parents."

ELEMENTARY PRINCIPALS' CONFERENCE
School administrators from ten southwestern
Illinois counties are expected to attend an
elementary principals' conference at the
Alton Residence Center on April 18. The
conference is being sponsored by SIU's
Southwestern Illinois Campus. Several outstanding school leaders from the State
Department of Education, the area public
schools and the University will participate
in the program \·J hich Hill run from 9:00 a.m.
to 3:00p.m. Comin~ from the Carbondale
campus will be Dr. J. Murray Lee, education
department chairman, Hho will serve on one
of the panels; Rebecca Baker, Troy Edwards,
Luther Bradfield, Ted Ragsdale and John Hees,
all of whom \vill serve as consultants and
resource persons during the conference.
Those from the Southwestern Illinois
Campus \vho will take part are David Bear,
who is conference chairman; Robert Steinkellner, whouill serve on "The Principalship in Retrospect'~ panel and Leonard B.
Wheat, who will serve as one of the consultants.

Family Relations. Theme of the conference
was "Hith Hhat Image of Harriage and Family do He Operate?" Seymour served as
moderator of and participated in the panel
discussion of "l·Jhat Idea and Value System
Concerning Marriage and Family Life Shall
lve Teach?" i\t last year's meeting, held
at the University of Illinois, Seymour
was re-elected to the council's executive
board.
"Macbeth and the Seven Degrees of
Sin" is the title of the paper John
Knoepfle will read i\pril 25 at the Central
Renaissance Conference to be held at
Stephens College. It is a study of the
stages Macbeth passes through toward his
despair. The work is based on a comparison of texts, using an analogy drawn by
John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, in his
COMHENTARY ON THE SEVEN PENITENTIAL PSAL't-IS.
Commenting on the "De Profundus" in that
work, he compares the story of Jonah to
the sevenfold movement of a man toward
despair.
Attending the HidHest District Convention of the American Association for
Health, Physical Education and Recreation
in Indianapolis April 15-17 will be Babette
Marks, Howard Nesbitt and Harjorie Logan.
Babette Marks uill also attend the
annual meeting of the Hidwest Association
of Physical Education for College Women
April 24-26 at McCormick's Creek State
Park, Spencer, Indiana

ATTEND CONFERENCES

.

. Howard Davis attended the national convention of the American Personnel and Guidance
Association in Cleveland, Ohio, from March
22 to 25. On Harch 16 he addressed the
Regional Illinois Guidance and Personnel
Association Conference at Highland. His
topic, "Guidance from the Kindergarten
Through the High School." Davis also
participated in the regional APGA Conference
at St. Louis on i\pril 3. Theme, "Presentinfj
Occ~pational Information to Students."
Virgil Seymour Has at the University
of 8hicago Harch 13 and 14 attending the
annual meeting of the Illinois Council on

Mary H. Brady attended the annual
convention of the Illinois Business Education Association at the Pere Harquette
Hate 1 in Peoria Narch 19-21. At this .
convention she served as recorder of the
section on "Guidance ln Business Education." She was also an area representative at the meeting of the IBEA Council.
On April 24-25 she and David Bear will
attend a workshop in East Lansing, Michigan, preparatory to the workshop to be
held on the SHI Campus this summer,
"Educational Utilbation of Communit•y
Resources."
Nicholas Joost Hill attend the annual

�- 3 -

convention of Illinois Teachers of
English at DeKalb on April 25.

Colle~e

RECEIVES APPOINTl!EtlT TO "Y"
Babette Marks hns been appointed to the
Health Education Committee o£ the Alton Y\JCJ\. .
NEWS OF TECHNICJ\.L /UTD ADULT EDUCATION

•

Chelsea Bailey has announced that on Nay 20
the Granite City and Alton industrial management proljrams uill join in graduation
exercises for those students who have completed eight of the fourteen courses offere J
in industrial mana~ement. At 6:30p.m. a
social hour uill be held in the Hotel Strat ford in Alton, folloHed at 7:00 by a dinner.
In addition to the [;raduates, sponsors from
the organL; ations uhere they are employed
will be present. Their instructors, too,
will be on hand. Bailey will preside.
Classes in Industrial Report \Vritinc
were begun this month at Monsanto Chemical
Company and at Laclede Steel Company.
Another in-plant course being offered is
the Supervisor and His Job at A. 0. Smith
Corporation.
The follmvinr; adult courses also
opened this month: ABC's of Selling,
sponsored by the lferchants Association of
Highland, and a course in floral arrangement, sponsored by the Edwardsville Chamber
of Commerce. Several other in-plant course s
are being organized.
On April 15 the first meeting of the
East St. Louis coordinating committee \vill
be held to prepare for industrial management courses to be started in September at
the East St. Louis center. These courses
will be similar to those now being offered
at Granite City and Alton.
The Life Underuriter' s Training Council, better known as the LUTC, continues
to meet each Thursday afternoon at the East
St. Louis center. Bailey advises us that
great interest is being shown by the life
insurance men attending. In September
he hopes a chartered life underwriter course
will be available for those life insurance
men who wish to study for the CLU designation. This course takes a minimum of four
years to complete.

GUESTS OF EDWAl.\DSVILLE SCHOOLS
Robert Duncan, John Ades and Milton Byrd
attended English Curricula Evaluation
Day at Edwardsville on April 1 as guests
of A. Gordon Dodds, school superintendent,
and his administrative staff. The three
visited classes during the morning and
during the afternoon were in conference
with English teachers and the administration, at which time they made comments
and criticisms of the school program.

SERVED AS CONSULTANT AT EDl.JARDSVILLE
Joseph C. Jurjevich served as consultant
to the social studies teachers in the
Edwardsville public schools on March 25.
He and Eldon \&lt;Jheeler of the Wood River
public schools visited some of the social
studies and languace arts core classes in
the junior high school and as many of the
senior high school social studies classes
as time would permit. Following the visitation, the teachers and administrators met
with the consultants for an evaluative
session.

CHANGES FOR YOUR CM1PUS DIRECTORY
The following have either moved, have
a new telephone number or both:
Myron C. Bi8hop, 121 Thomas Terrace,
Edwardsville, phone 3699
Clifton Cornwell, 930 Holyoake Street,
phone 3681
Joseph C. Jur jevich, Jr., phone Alton 2-1270
Babette Marks, 72 Uest Beach Street,
\.Jood River, phone Lf-3078
Gunter \.J. Remmlinr,, phone Alton 2-259l,
Marian A. Taylor, phone Alton 9-2767
James D. Turner, phone Dickens 4-0275

FACULTY COUNCIL NEETING CHANGED
Because the sub-committee on General
Studies has not made sufficient progress
for its official report, the Faculty Council meeting has been postponed until April
30. It had originally been scheduled for
April 9.

�-

REFLECTIONS OF A UETUEAT
was the title of the speech given by John
J. Glynn on Harch 15 to a group of men at
the King's Hous·e in Belleville.

L; -

(1956) and the second complete work of
Fayrfax ever printed. Recently Warren's
edition of the motet vJas recorded by the
choir of the Cathedral of St. John the
Divine. It is the first complete work
of Faytfax to be recorded.

PHILOSOPHY OF J.ELIGION AND SCIENCE
BAKER'S
was the title of a program in which Alfred
E. Kuenzli participated on March 27. It
\vas part of the annual meeting of the
Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology held in St. Louis. His paper \ ·laS
concerned with contributions of psychological research to problems of ethical living.
TO ADDRESS STUDENT- NEA TEACHERS
Robert Steinkellner Hill speak on "Teaching
in a Modern Society" April 16 in the East
St. Louis High School auditorium. His
audience will be nearly 500 student-NEA
teachers.
SELLS PLAY AND STORY
Harian A~ Taylor has sold a play entitled
THE WHITE WHALE to PLAYS magazine. The
story concernc Herman Helville. A short
story of hers, entitled THE ICE IS ON Trlli
RICE, has been cold to U.S. LADY, a service
women's magazine. On Harch 31, a book review by Mrs. Taylor uas carried in the St.
Louis POST DISPATCH. The book revie\ved
was THE CAVE 0::' ICE by Pamela Horton.
DUNCAN SELLS

•

.~~TICLE

Robert Duncan hac ::;old an article entitled
"A Glance at Flight Literature" to AIR
FACTS magazine.
ANOTHER FIRST
Ed\vin Harren's transcription and edition
from the original sixteenth century manu- ·
script of "O lux beata" by Fayrfax was the
first composition of ·this important early
English Renaissance coQposer to be published

f~TICLE

PRAISED BY ATTORNEYS

Richard C. Baker is author of an article
Hhich was carried in three installments
(Nov., Dec., 1958, Jan., 1959) in the
ILLINOIS BAR JOURNAL. Entitled "Yesterday's Critics of the Federal Judiciary, 11
the article has been favorably commented
on by Illinois attorneys. In his article,
Baker has attempted to show that Governor Faubus of Arkancas is not the first
public official to defy the Supreme
Court. Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln and
. Franklin D. Roosevelt and numerous others
among our well-knm-m patriots have been
equally guilty, says Baker.
"Three years after the constitution
Hent into effect, Ilayburn's case was decided, which evoked the first serious
reprimand of the federal judiciary. Under
an act of congress, federal circuit judges
had been empowered to pass on the validity
of soldiers' pensions, subject, however,
to the right of the Secretary of War to
refuse, in his discretion, to honor and
give effect to their findings. Several
Supreme Court justicec sitting on the
circuit held the lm1 in question unconstitutional on the ground that it attempted to impose on the judges non-judicial
powers. The reaction following this
ruling was immediate and vigorous, and
was punctuated \·J ith numerous demands for
impeaching the offending jurists."
Citing another instance of lack of
respect which young America occasionally
had both for lmv and the federal judiciary , Baker pointed out in his article
that "During our maritime controversies
with England and France in 1808 and
thereabouts, Jefferson instructed the
collectors of customs to detain all
vesse ls loaded uith provisions. A
federal court, speaking through Supreme
Court Justice Hilliam John~:;on on circuit,
held, however, that the law gave the

�- 5 -

•

collectors discretion in the matter, and
that they therefore t·J ere not required to
obey the president's command. Jefferson
at once induced Attorney General Caesar
Rodney to write an opinion controverting
Johnson's and to send it to all collector s .
In complying tvith Jefferson's request,
Rodney commented: 'The judicial power,
if permitted, uill sHallow the rest. They
will become omnipotent
It is high
time for the people to apply some remedy
to the disease.' In a like vein Senator
William Giles of Virr;inia asserted: 'Hhen
the judges so far forget the true character
and dignity of their stations, judicial
proceedings cannot lonr; preserve the respect heretofore attached to them.'
"Acting under Jefferson's instructions
as set forth in the Attorney General's
opinion, the collectors began disregarding
Johnson's decision. Their action caused a
Baltimore neHspaper to remark: 'The opinion
has ever since been acted upon, in preference to the decision. This obstinancy and
disregard of the judiciary has been acquiesced in by the public . . . '"
REVIEWS PAMPHLET
A review by H. H. Smith of Hyron F. Hicke' s
on TEACHING IN A CHRISTIAN COLLEGE appeared
in COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY: THE JOURNAL O::C
THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE REGISTRARS AND ADHISSIONS OFFICERS, Vol. 3L; ,
No. 2, Winter, 1959, p. 231. A 63-page
pamphlet, it uas published in 1958 by the
Division of Educational Institutions, Board
of Education, The Hethodist Church, Nashville, Tennessee.

•

ENGAGED IN RESEMCH FO:l HORCESTER ART
HUSEUM
Nicholas Joost Hill tal~e part in a symposium May 9-10 at Horcc ster Art Huseum in
honor of the thirtieth anniversary of THE
DIAL. An art exhibition, featuring the
Dial Collectio n of Scofield Thayer, will
be held in conjunction with the sympo s ium.
Joost is doinr; research for the Huseum concerning THE DIL\L (1920-29). His participation has, for about tHo years and a half,

. involved the findinG of unpublished
papers, catalo guinG and ordering them,
and with these resources writing a
manuscript entitled nThe Dial and the
Twenties." Joo s t has acted as a research consultant at the Huseum and has
contributed to the catalog of the exhibition. Joost was also engaged this
past year in the ~riting of a revised
constitution and set of by-laws for
Delta Epsilon Sigma, the national scholastic honor society for Catholic colleges and universities . Both the revised constitution and by-laws were
published in the Delta Epsilon Sigma's
Harch BULLETIN, of uhich he is editor.
His revie\·J -essay, "Public Education
and the Private Conscience," appeared
in the CATHOLIC FlEE PRESS Narch 13.
Among other things, he is compiling an
anthology of modern religious poetry.
Joost is a member of the advisory board
of MODERN AGE. He has served for several years as a judr;c for the quarterly
poetry contests sponsored by the Hospitali zed Veterans Uriting Contests,
and is an editorial adviser for THE
.POETRY PUB.LIC.
GOLDIE TERSS GOING TO HASHINGTON
lvhen Goldie Terss became secretary to
Harold W. See in October, 1955, See had
been here only one month. Since then
Gpldie, under his leadership, has seen
the residence pror;ram at SIU increase
from one center at Belleville to three
centers. She has seen him advance from
director of the Belleville center to
executive dean of the three centers,
which now include Alton and East St.
Louis. More recently she has seen him
advance to vice precident. -Many times
See has praised hie secretary's loyalty
and efficiency. lie uill miss her--and
so will the rest of uc.
For sometime Goldie has had the
urge to "go east." IIcr difficulty in
deciding between rleH York City and
Washington, D. C., deterred her for a
time. However, our nation's capital
won--despite the fact that her cohorts
at the BroadvieH tried to convince her

�- Gthere were already too many single women
in l.Jashington. Goldie will leave at the
end of this month. He are sorry to see
her go but we 't'lish her a lot of luck and
happiness in '"hatever new assignment she
assumes.
FROM THE DESK 0::? THE DEAN OF INSTRUCTIO!!

.

As you know from the brief mention about
a General Studies Program in my recent
memo to the staff, the Faculty Council
has constituted itself into a "committee
of the whole" to study this problem.
Frederick A. Forrest has prepared a great
deal of useful bibliographical material;
Leonard B. Hheat has served as chairman
of a sub-committee on the definition of
the term General Education, and Eric A.
Sturley is presently chairing a subcommittee to pull some of our preliminary
discussions into more concrete proposals.
We have also revie\'led the administrative
and committee thinking about General
Education on the Carbondale campus during
the past eight years.
This spring and next fall the Faculty
Council ,.,ill continue to work on plans for
a General Studie::; program. We are '"ell
aware this is no easy task and that whatever plans '"e evolve must be in some
fashion synchroni~ed with similar planning
for the entire University. But we believe
we can offer students a broader view of
the core of kno't'lledge and skills peculiar
to all disciplines and at the same time
create more easily administered freshman
and sophomore programs if together \ve can
find enough unity in our thinking and in
the implementation of that thinking.
Again let me urge you to pass alons
to the Council, in writing, your sugge::;tions about revising the General Education
requirements.

The Dean's list of honor students
(now posted on bulletin boards) shmvs an
increase of 28 per cent over last fall's
list. Either the quality of our students'
performance is improving or our faculty ha::;
mellowed after the Christmas recess. I
hope the former is true.

VISITORS FROH CARBOllDALE CAMPUS
The Southwestern Illinois Campus played
host to a number of prominent staff members from the Carbondale campus early
this month.
On April 8 Pre::;ident Delyte H. Harris
addressed a joint meeting of the Alton and
East St. Louis faculties. The meeting was
held in the chapel at Alton.
Vice President for Instruction
Charles D. Tenney and the following deans
from Carbondale visited the two centers
on April 10: H. E. Keeper, School of
Agriculture; Henry J. Rehn, S~hool of
Business; John E. Grinnell, College of
Education; T. H. Abbott, College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences; C. Horton
Talley, School of Communications; Raymond
H. Dey, Division of University Extension;
Burnett H. Shryoclc, School of Fine Arts;
Hillis G. Swartz, Graduate School, and
Harry B. Bauernfeind, assistant dean,
Adult Education.
After visiting the East St. Louis and
Alton centers, the gu~sts were shown the
proposed new campus site near Ed\vardsville.

�It

••

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~

APRIL

30_,

VoL.l_,

1958

No.12

q'onPILED NONTHLY BY INFORNATION S ERVICE_, So uTHWESTERN ILLINOIS
RESIDENCE
OFFICE _, S ouTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY_, FOR THE STAFF
.
lfEJ1BERS OF THE RESIDENCE CENTERS _, THE NE'-'ISLETTER IS 11AD E POSSIBLE BY THE COOPERATION OF STA FF 11El1BERS WHO H AVE CONTRIBUTED
NEWS

I TEJfS.

FA C ULTY

NEWS LETTER

Faculty Picnic
A faculty picnic, planned by the 1.Jomen' s Club, is scheduled for Saturday,
May 24, at Cahokia Mounds State Park, corner of Routes 40/66 and Sand Prairie Lane.
(This is plain Route 40 --not Alternate 40, or City 40, or By Pass 40.) Altonians,
coming on Route 111, turn left at Sand Prairie Lane, and follow it to its junction
with Route 40. (Route 40 is one and the same as Route 66 in this part of the country.)
Bellevillagers go west on Main Street or Route 161 to Route 157. Turn right and
follow 157 to Routes 40/66. Turn left and follow 40/66 toward East St. Louis until
you see the Mounds Park on your right.
Faculty members and families are invited to come at 2:00p.m. This year the
state parks are charging an admission fee of ten cents for each person over twelve
years of age, plus ten cents for each car. Mr. Webb, park supervisor, said that
if anyone in the group possesses a $2.00 sticker (good for unlimited visits to all
Illinois state parks for a period of one year), this person may bring in any number
of persons without charge, making as many trips as he pleases. These stickers are
on sale at this and all other Illinois state parks.
Families with small children may avail themselves of the services of trained
supervisors of children's activities. Mr. Norman Showers; health and P.E., Alton,
has arranged to have several reliable students on hand to entertain children. Fee:
fifty cents per family for the entire afternoon.
A picnic supper is planned for 5:00 p.m. Each family is asked to bring its
own table service, bread (or buns), hot dogs (or other meat), and beverages for the
family members who do not drink coffee. Each family is also asked to bring one or
two dishes to be "passed around." This could be salad, vegetable (e.g., baked beans),
or des&lt;Sert.
Board members are bringing extra meat, bread, and table servic e for the bachelors.
Bachelors are asked to bring pickles , potato chips, marshma l lows, or other picnic items,
Dr. Alfred Harris will be in charge of making the coffee .
.Mr. Hebb says that park facilities include rest rooms, play ground equipment,
approved drinking water, and fire wood. Facilities will be available for grilling
or cooking hot dogs.
Since Mr. Webb would like to know how many people are coming, persons planning
to attend should telephone Geneva Peebles (Alton 2-3425) or Betty Spahn (Adams 3-4424)
by Friday evening, May 23 . .
Persons planning to attend the picnic are asked to keep this bulletin as a
reminder, since no other notice will be published.

Dr. Leonard Wheat, graduate program coordinator, Residence Centers, and acting
director, East St. Louis, was guest speaker of the Lorena Avenue Parent-Teacher Association at Lewis Clark School in Wood River April 22.

(more)

�- 2 -

.

Dr. Floyd Meyer, librarian, East St. Louis, and Thomas E. Parks, assistant
Alton, attended the Midwest Academic Librarians' Conference at Carbondale
~pril 25-26.
:;
Chairman of a discussion group on the "Role of Faculty and Librarians in Book
'~election," Dr. Meyer also participated in a discussion on "Library Building Problems."
.'At the Library Recognition Dinner, at which SIU President Delyte H. Morris acted as
~oastmaster, the librarians heard Dr. Francis Horn, SIU distinguished professor
'( formerly president of Pratt Institute) speak on "The Future of the Library in Higher
~ducation." "Talking in terms of building libraries from scratch, many of his coml'Pents were particularly apropos," Dr. Meyer reported.
· ~ibrarian,

,
Mr. Chelsea Bailey, technical and adult education supervisor, Residence Office,
and Mr. Thomas Evans, student affairs supervisor, East St. Louis, addressed luncheon
meetings of the National Conference of Christians and Jews in East St. Louis on
April 10, 17, and 24. Mr. Bailey spoke on "Leadership Training Techniques." Mr .
Evans, on a continuing committee to develop plans for training lay leaders in the
f:ommunity, outlined "Group Dynamics of the Conference Situation" and "Human Forces
:that Influence the Conference Situation."

Dr. Eric Baber, director, Alton, addressed a dinner meeting of the Edwardsville
Lions Club this month on "Educational Trends and Opportunities in Madison and St.
Clair Counties."
------------------------------~

Miss Babette Marks, health and P.E., Alton and East St. Louis, took part in a
panel at a meeting of the Southwestern District of the Illinois Association for Health,
P.E., and Recreation held at Granite City High School on April 25. Topic: "Evaluation
~n P.E." Miss Marks recently presented a demonstration of hockey skills at the
~ational convention of the American Association for Health, Physical Education, and
Recreation in Kansas City.

Virgil L. Seymour, sociology, East St. Louis, spoke on "The Design and Function
of a .Social Service Exchange" at an April 10 board meeting of the usa-Traveler Is Aid
i,n Belleville. The following day he discussed "Changing Sex Roles in a Changing Society!'
~t the first annual banquet of t .he Caseyville Methodist Church's Friendship Class.
Mr. Seymour was re-elected a member of the executive committee of the Illinois Council
pn Family Relations at the Council's annual conference in Urbana last month.

Dr. S. D. Lovell, government, East St. Louis, reported today that he expects
his new home at 200 Hinchester in Belleville to be completed by June 1. The new
home of the Lovells is five blocks south of Main and 60th. One length of their basement
has sliding doors opening on the garden at lawn level.
,.

(more)

�- 3 -

Mr. David Van Horrt, Alton, and . Mr. Gene Turner., East St. Louis 1 working in
~heir capacity as admissions counselors, have vi Eit ted the followih g high sc·hob ls:
~viston, Trenton, Lebanon, Breese, Madison, Venice, Lovejoy, Lincoln (East St . . Louis),

Assumption (East St. Louis), Marissa, New Athens, Cahokia Commonfields, East AitonHood River, Bethalto, Roxana, Freebur g , Staunton, Worden, Bunker Hill, Gillespie,,
Southwestern, North&gt;veste rn, Litchfield, Hillsboro, Mulberry Grove, Greenville, Winchester, Roodhouse, Whitehall, Carrollton, and Hardin. They made their visits nciw
alone and nm·J as a team, and occacionally they were accompanied by other staff meml:&gt;ers (e.&gt;g. Dr. Eric Sturley, math, Alton; Dr. John Schnabel, associate registrar,
Residence Office; Dr. Leonard Wheat, op.cit.; and Mr. Lionel Howell, business office,
East St. Loui s .)

Dr. Steven Barwick , piano, Carbondale, will play a concert engagement at Alton
on May 12. Featuring Bach, Beethoven, Ravel, and Ponlenc, his concert in the chapel
auditorium will begin at 8:30p.m. A former student of Claudio Arrau, Dr. Barwick
has been on SIU's faculty since 1955. He taught previously at Harvard, Radcliffe,
Blue Mountain College, the University of Pittsburgh, and Western Kentucky State
·~allege.
His master's degree is from the Eastman School of Music and his doctorate
:f rom Harvard. European critics hailed his "technical mystery" in a 1956 tour of
England, France, Italy, Germany, Holand, and Scandinavia.

Dr. Margaret Brady, secretarial science, Alton will sponsor a l-JOrkshop on
the handling of manual and electric type•.;rriters at the Alton Center on Saturday,
~ay 3.
Open to anyone interested in typing problems, the workshop will cover
development of speed in both manual and electric typing, manipulative devices of ··
.t he electric typelvriter, and various short cuts in tabulation and letter writing.
Each person taking part &gt;vill have an electric typewriter to use, 1vith opportunity
to follow the demonstrations.
Dr. Brady, faculty sponsor of the student newspaper which appeared in printed form
for its sixth issue on April 29th, is co-author with New York University's Pete r
L. Agnew of a text book, Advanced Key-Driven Calculator Course, published this
month by South-VJestern Publishing Company, Cincinnati .

Dr. Eric Baber, op.cit .. lvith Mr. Morris Carr, business office , Alton, planned
"Drive .. in Conference" on " School Lunch Pro grams" held at the Alton Center on April 26.
Almost a hundred educators from Madison, St. Clair, Calhoun, and Jersey Counties,
serving on panels with their counterparts from Carbondale, Chicago , St. Louis, and
Springfield, spent several hours discussing subjects ranging from in s tructional possioilities and operating policies of school lunch programs to financin g and equipping
of school cafeterias.
.1

a

Staff members from Alton and East St. Louis square-danced at Alton on Saturday,
April 12, to the calling of Hiss Babette Narks, op.cit.
(more)

�... •.... ""

- 4 -

Homen's Club Hears John Allen
'
Mr. John H. Allen, Emeritus, Carbondale, SIU expert on the southern half of
'Illinois, addressed the April meeting of the Residence Centers' \.Jomen' s Club. Mr.
Allen told the women, mostly newcomers to southern Illinois, about the history of
the area. Founding president of the Southern Illinois Folklore Society and past
president of the Illinois Historic a l Society, Allen retired as SIU museum director
several years ago.

Dr. Howard Davis, student affairs, Alton, was guest speaker of the Granite
City Junior High School Parent Teacher Association on April 28. Speaking at Central
Junior High School, he discussed "Helping Adolescents over Emotional Hurdles."
During the same fortnight he addressed a nurses' training group at Alton High School
on vocational training.

Mr. Thomas Evans, op.cit., l.S working with the East St. Louis Junior Chamber
of Commerce to select one of this June's high school graduates to be awarded a
four-year scholarship at SIU -- either at Carbondale or one of the Centers. Using
test scores and personal interviews, he has narrowe d the field of applicants
all seniors in hi gh schools of Eas t St. Louis -- from 25 to 7.

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Schedule of Classes ·

.

Edwardsville Campus ·
Winter, 1966 ·

Southern Illinois
University Bulletin

1:II

I'

p5)

�This Bulletin
contains the schedule of classes to be offered by the Edwardsville Campus for the winter quarter of the 1965-66
school year a t Edwardsville, Alton, and East St. Louis. It
a lso provides information relative to admission, advisement, registration, and fees. This schedule supersedes
Vo lume 7, No. 6.

�Schedule of Classes
Edwardsville Campus
Winter Quarter, 1966

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Volume 7
Number 11
November, 1965
Second-class postage paid at Carbondale, Illinois. Published by Southern Illinois University, monthly except
December.

�Contents
University Calendar ............. .. .. .......................................
Registration Calendar ......................................................

iii
iv

GENERAL INFORMATION ....................................................

1

Admission and Advisement ........................................
Re-entering Students ................................................
Current Students, Edwardsville Campus ..............
Current Students, Carbondale Campus ................
Payment of Fees ............................................................
Fees for a R egular Quarter ....................................
Academic Load ............................................................
Prerequisites .. ..... ...... .. .. .. ... ... .. .... .. .. .. .. .. ... ..... .. .... .... .......
Auditing of Courses ....................................................
Registering for and dropping Courses ......................
Withdrawal From School ..........................................
Cancella tion of Registration ........................................
Personal Data Changes ..............................................

1
1
1
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
4
4
4

ScHEDULE oF CLASSES ....................................................

7

Explanation of the Schedule ......................................
Course Numbering system ..........................................
Schedule of General Studies Courses ........................
Schedule of Departmental Courses ............................
Schedule for Vocational-Technical Institute
Courses ......................................................................

7
7
8
15

11

32

�University Calendar
Fall Quarter, 1965
New Student Week
Sunday-Tuesday, September 19-21
Wednesday, September 22
Quarter Begins
Wednesday, 12 Noon-Monday,
Thanksgiving Vaca tion
8 A.M . , November 24- 29
Final Examinations Monday- Saturday, December 13- 18

Winter Quarter, 1966
Quarter Begins
Final Examinations

Monday, January 3
Monday- Saturday, March 14-19

Spring Quarter, 1966
Quarter Begins
~emorial Day Holiday
Monday, March 28
Fmal Examinations
Th d
Monday, May 30
Commencement (Edwardsvill~)s ay-Wednesday, June 2-8
Commencement (Carbondale)
Thursday, June 9
Friday, June 10

Summer Quarter, 1966
Quarter Begins
Monday, June 13
Independence Day Holiday
Monday, July 4
Monday-Saturday, August 22-27
Final Examinations
Commencement (Carbondale )
Saturday, August 27
Commencement ( Edwardsville )
Sunday, August 28
Classes begin on the second day of the quarter,
except that the evening classes (5:45 P.M. or
later ) on the Carbondale Campus begin on the
first night of the quarter.

iii

�Registration Calendar
Winter Quarter, 1966
November 15-18. Registration at East St. Louis: Monday
through Thursday, 12:00 Noon to 8:00 P.M., for freshmen and sophomore students enrolling in classes only at
the East St. Louis center and junior and senior students
enrolled at East St. Louis. Fees are payable at time of registration.
November 19-24. Registration at Alton: Friday through
Wednesday, 12:00 Noon to 8 :00 P.M. except Saturday,
November 20, 8:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon and Wednesday,
November 24, 8:00A.M. to 12:00 Noon, for freshmen and
sophomore students enrolling in classes only at the Alton
center and junior and senior students enrolled at Alton.
Fees are payable at time of registration.
November 24. Registration for all Winter Quarter classes
will be only at Edwardsville after November 24.
November 29-December 3. Registration at Edwardsville:
Monday through Friday, 8:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M., for
juniors, seniors, graduate students and full-time freshmen
and sophomores enrolling at Edwardsville. Fees are payable at time of registration.
December 4. Registration at Edwardsville: 8:00 A.M. to
12:00 Noon, for juniors, seniors, graduate students and
full-time freshmen and sophomores enrolling at Edwardsville. Fees are payable at time of registration.
December 6-10. Registration at Edwardsville: Monday
through Friday, 8:00A.M. to 5 :00 P.M. All currently enrolled students and new and re-entering students who have
been admitted register for classes scheduled for all locations. Students in school Fall Quarter who do not register
on or before December 10 or whose registrations are cancelled must wait until Monday, January 10, 1966 and will
be assessed a $5.00 late fee on that date. Fees are payable
at time of registration.
January 3-8. Program Adjustments. Students who have
classes cancelled after advance registration and prior to
January 8 may make a program change at any time during
this period without charge.
January 3. Registration at Edwardsville: 8 :00 A.M. to 8:00
P.M. Only re-entering and new students who have been
admitted will be advised and registered for classes scheduled at all locations. Fees are payable at time of registration.
January 4. Classes begin 7:00 A.M.
IV

�p

General
Information

1

contains the schedule of classes to be offered at the new campus located southwest of Edwardsville and the Alton and East St. Louis centers for the
winter quarter of the 1965-66 school year. It also provides
information relative to advisement and registration, fees,
and allied information.
The opening of the new building complex at the Edwardsville campus provides for a full schedule of class
offerings for day students. Evening classes are scheduled
for upperclassmen and graduate students. Freshman and
sophomore courses are scheduled for day and evening students at the Alton and East St. Louis centers.
THIS BULLETIN

ADMISSION
A student must be officially admitted to the University
before registration in classes will be permitted. Students
who have not completed the admission requirements by
the first day of the quarter will not be permitted to register. A student, to be permitted to attend classes at
Southern Illinois University, must have completed registration, which includes admission, advisement, sectioning,
and payment of fees.
Inquiries concerning admission to Southern Illinois
University should be directed to the Admissions Office
at Edwardsville. Applications for admission are accepted
any time during the calendar year but should be initiated
at least 30 days prior to the start of the quarter which
the student plans to attend.
Graduate students and students who have completed
96 quarter hours or more will register for upper level
classes scheduled at Edwardsville. Freshmen and sophomores who are enrolling as full-time ( 12 hours or more)
students may register for Edwardsville classes.

RE-ENTERING STUDENTS
A student who has attended the University at some former
time but not during the session immediately prior to the
time he plans to re-enter should initiate action by contacting the Admissions Office.

CURRENT STUDENTS,
EDWARDSVILLE CAMPUS
For admittance to registration students previously enrolled
must present their Southern Illinois University ID cards.
No one will be permitted to register without an ID card

�except new students. Each student currently registered in
the University will be continued in his present course of
study unless a change of concentration is made. A change
of concentration is initiated with the chief academic adviser. The change should be made at the time of advisement; the registrar's copy of the change form should accompany the student's registration. A change of concentration made after a registration has been processed will not
be reflected until the next registration.
A student currently registered in the University may
be self-advised for registration purposes. Academic advisement is available if desired. The student should prepare his desired program of classes at each registration
period and process through the sectioning area of the
enrollment center as soon as possible at the start of the
registration period in order to achieve the desired schedule
of classes and time periods.

CURRENT STUDENTS,
CARBONDALE CAMPUS
A student currently enrolled in and attending classes on
the Carbondale Campus who desires to register on the
Edwardsville Campus will initiate his registration at the
sectioning area of the enrollment center where he plans
to attend classes. Each student will complete the intrauniversity transfer data form to secure information necessary for the data processing center preparation of registration materials. The student who registers on the first
day of the quarter should present his most recent grade
report to confirm scholastic eligibility to register.
For the purpose of advisement, the student may wish
to have a copy of his transcript sent to the Edwardsville
Campus prior to registration.

PAYMENT OF FEES
FEES FOR A REGULAR
QUARTER
The University reserves the right to change fees and to
have the change go into effect whenever the proper authorities so determine. Under the current fee schedule, Illinois undergraduate students taking more than 8 hours pay
the following regular fees:
Tuition ................................................. . $42.00
8.00
Book rental ......................................... .
Activity fee ........................................... . 10.50
Student Welfare and Recreational
Facilities Building Trust Fund Fee 15.00
Student union building fund fee ........
5.00
Total .................................................... $80.50
Illinois students taking 8 or fewer hours pay the following
fees:
Tuition ................................................. . $21.00
4.00
Book rental ......................................... .
Student union building fund fee ..... .
5.00
Total ..................................................... . $30.00
2

�The act!Vlty fee of $10.50 is optional for part-time students. Once an option has been made by a student at the
time of registration as to whether or not to pay the activity fee, such an option is irrevocable.
Out-of-state students pay an additional $80 if they
take more than 8 hours, or an additional $40 if they take
8 hours or fewer.
In addition to the above, there are some physical
education classes that require a special fee.

ACADEMIC LOAD
The normal class load is 16 quarter hours for undergraduate students and 12 quarter hours for graduate students.
The maximum load for both is 18 hours. A student with
a 4.25 average or above for the preceding quarter may be
allowed by the chief academic adviser of the center or by
the head of his division to take as many as 21 hours. In no
case may a student carry or be credited with more than
21 hours in any quarter. A student on probation may not
take more than 14 hours.
A person may not register for more than 8 hours if he
is employed full time.
The Selective Service System requires a minimum
of 12 hours to qualify for a student deferment.
The National D efense Education Act requires a minimum of 12 hours to qualify for a student loan.

PREREQUISITES
Students are responsible for checking course prerequiSites
in the catalog. Those who do not have specific prerequisites for a course may register for it only if they have
had a comparable course, or have written consent of the
instructor.

AUDITING OF COURSES
A student may register for courses in an "audit" status.
He receives no letter grade and no credit for such courses.
An auditor's registration card must be marked accordingly.
He pays the same fees as though he were registering for
credit. H e is expected to attend regularly and is to determine from the instructor the amount of work expected of
him. If an auditing student does not attend regularly, the
instructor may determine that the student should not have
the audited course placed on his record card maintained
in the R egistrar's Office. A student registering for a course
for credit may change to an audit status or vice versa only
for fully justified reasons and only during the first four
weeks of a quarter. Such a change requires the academic
dean's approval.

REGISTERING FOR AND
DROPPING COURSES
Mere attendance does not constitute registration in a class,
nor will attendance in a class for which a student is not
3

�registered be a basis for asking that a program adjustment
be approved permitting registration in that class. A student
is officially registered only for those courses and sections
appearing on his registration cards. Changes can be made
only after fees are paid and must be made through an
official program change.
A student desiring to make a program adjustment
must initiate his request at the enrollment center of the
Registrar's Office. He must present his fee receipt program
card and complete the following procedure. After having
been cleared with the enrollment center, program changes
for which a program change fe e is assessed must be presented to the Business Office for payment. The student
immediately returns the program adjustment form to the
enrollment center in the Registrar's Office for final processing. A student has not completed his program adjustment change until he presents the form to the enrollment
center in the Registrar's Office. No change is official until the preceding procedure is complete.
A program adjustment day is listed in the registration
calendar for each quarter. Anyone desiring to make
changes which necessitate adding or dropping classes
should do so on the day provided. A program adjustment
must be made to drop or add a course. A student may not
drop a course merely by stopping attendance. Failure to
officially drop a course may result in academic penalty.
The last date for dropping a course without receiving a
W grade is the last day of the fourth week of the quarter.

WITHDRAWAL FROM SCHOOL
A student who finds it necessary to withdraw from school
while the quarter is in progress must report to the enrollment center in the Registrar's Office to initiate official
withdrawal action. No withdrawal will be permitted during the last two weeks of a quarter except under exceptional conditions. A refunding of fees is permitted only if
a withdrawal is officially completed within the first two
weeks of a quarter and if the application for a refund is
received in the Registrar's Office within two weeks following the last regular registration period. See the registration
calendar for the specific dates concerning withdrawal and
refunding of fees.

CANCELLATION OF
REGISTRATION
A registration including the payment of tUitiOn and fees
may be considered invalid if the student is declared to be
ineligible to register due to scholastic reasons. The same
situation may exist due to financial or disciplinary reasons if certified to the registrar by the Student Affairs
Division.

PERSONAL DATA CHANGES
1.

A CHANGE IN ADDRESS, whether local, home, or parents',
is to be reported by the student to the Registrar's Of-

4

�r

fice as soon as possible after th e change occurs. The
above addresses for a student are obtained from his
initial a pplication for admission. Address changes are
not made thereafter unless they are reported by the
student.
2. A cHANGE IN NAME is to be reported to the enrollment
center in the R egistrar's Office. A change for marital
reasons will be made on th e basis of a signed statement.
Other changes may require th e presentin g of legal evidence.
3. A CHANGE IN MARITAL STATUS is to be reported to the
R egistrar's Office. A change will be made if it is based
upon incorrect coding or punching. Any other change
must be accompanied by a signed statement.
4. A CHANGE IN LEGAL RESIDENCE (whether an Illinois Or
out-of-state resident ) may be initiated in the Registrar's
Office by requesting to be declared an Illinois resident.
Before the request is honored, the registrar must be
satisfied that the student has met the regulations governing residency status as established by the Board of
Trustees.

5

��Schedule of
Classes

2

The University reserves the right to cancel, combine,
divide, or limit enrollment in any class or classes; to
change the date, time, or place of meeting; to make any
other revisions in these course offerings which may become
desirable or necessary; and to do so without notice and
without incurring obligation.

EXPLANATION OF THE
SCHEDULE
Courses are listed numerically within. each subject-matter
area. The entry for each course is arranged as follows:
Bold-Face Line: The course's identification number is
followed by the number of quarter hours of credit and
the descriptive title. Special registration information or
other remarks about the course may appear on a second
bold-face line.
Light-Face Lines : The first column lists the section
numbers (first digit always 0 ) for classes offered at Edwardsville; the second lists sections (first digit always 2 )
for classes offered at Alton; the third lists sections (first
digit always 4 ) offered at East St. Louis. Following each
section number are the time the class begins (between
7:00 A.M. and 5:20 P .M . for daytime classes) .and the
time it ends. The section number of each evening class
has the letter E prefixed. The days when the class meets,
the place where it meets, and the instructor's last name
complete the entry.
The course numbering system is as follows :
000-099 Courses not properly falling in the following
categories
100-!99 For freshmen
200- 299 For sophomores
300-399 For juniors and seniors
400-499 For seniors and graduate students
500-600 For graduate students only
Students registering for courses listed as "Arranged"
should consult the instructor indicated, or the head of the
division if no instructor Is listed, to determine time and
place of meeting.

7

�8

GENERAL STUD IES AREA A ( GSA )

~d~~se A~t~-;-~~uS:. L~~~i~ripti~i,Jjtie -

·········o~~~ .......... ···· r&gt;i~~~ ·····-············ i~-~t~~-~-t~~-

MAN'S PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT
AND BIOLOGICAL INHERITANCE
(GSA)
!Ol a-3 Introduction to Physical Science .
12:00- 12:50
001
M w

F

GC 2405

staff

Alton and E. St. Louis students enroll in lec ture and one lab. (Lab and
Friday lec ture meet every other week.)

1:00-1:50
M w F
Lect
8:00-9:50
M
Lab 201
Lab 202
8:00-9:50
w
Lab 203
10:00-ll :50
Tu
10:00-10:50
M w F
Lect
Tu
Lab 401 12:00-1:50
lab 402 12:00-1:50
Th
Lab 403 10:00-ll :50
Tu
Lab 404 8:00-9:50
Tu
!Oib-3 Introduction to Physical Science .
2:00-2
:50
001
M w F
002
3:00-3:50
M w F
Alton and E. St. Louis students enroll in lecture

AUD 200
SCI 007
SCI 007
SCI 007
ESL 130
ESL 124
ESL 124
ESL 124
ESL 124

staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff

GC 2405
Shaw
GC 2405
Shaw
and one lab. (Lab and

Friday lecture meet every other week.)

2:00-2:50
Lect
M w F
2:00-3:50
Th
Lab 201
Lab 202
3:00- 4:50
M
3:00-4:50
w
Lab 203
Lect
3:00-3 :50
M w F
1:00-2:50
M
Lab 204
1:00-2:50
w
Lab 205
Lab 206
3 :00-4:50
Tu
2:00-2:50
Lect
M w F
Lab 401 12:00-1:50
M
Lab 402 12:00-1:50
w
Lab 403 2 :00-3:50
Tu
Lab 404 2:00-3:50
Th
!Ol c-3 Introduction to Physical Science .
Lect
3:00-3:50
Tu Th
Lab 201
2 :00-3:50
w
Lab 202
2:00- 3 :50
F
Lect
3:00-3:50
Tu Th
Lab 401 3 :00-4:50
w
F
Lab 402 3:00-4:50
200-3 Earth Science .

ANA 104
SCI 007
SCI 007
SCI 007
ANA 104
SCI 007
SCI 007
SCI 007
ESL 130
ESL 124
ESL 124
ESL 124
ESL 124

staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff

SCI 200
SCI 205
SCI 205
ESL 115
ESL 125
ESL 125

staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff

GC 0306
GC 0306
GC 0306
ANA llO
ANA llO
ANA llO
ANA llO
ANA llO
ANA llO
ESL 104
397-001
397--D01
ESL 104
397-001
397-001

Guffy
Guffy
Guffy
Yarbrough
Yarbrough
Yarbrough
Yarbrough
staff
staff

Student enrolls in one lab and associated lec ture.

2:00-2 :50
M w
Lect
F
2 :00-3:50
Lab 001
F
12:00-1
:SO
Lab 002
M w
9:00-9:50
Lect
F
Lab 201
8:00-9:50
9:00-10:50
Tu
Lab 202
2 :00-2:50
M w
Lect
Lab 203
2 :00-3 :50
Th
1:00-2:50
F
Lab 204
9:00-9:50
Lect
M w
Lab 401 9:00-10:50
Th
Lab 402 8:00-9 :SO
F
2:00-2:50
M w
Lect
Lab 403 2:00-3:50
Th
Lab 404 2 :00-3 :SO
F
LectLab E405 6:00-7:50
M w
20la-3 Man's Biological Inheritance .

Gore

Gore
staff
Gore
staff
staff

ESL 104

staff

AUD 200
SCI lll
SCI ll1
SCI ll1
SCI lll
SCI 111
SCI ll1
ESL 130
ESL ll6
F:SL ll6
ESL ll6
ESL ll6

Frost
Savostin
Savostin
Savostin
Savostin

Day student enrolls in lecture and one lab.

Lect
Lab 201
Lab 202
Lab 203
Lab 204
Lab 205
Lab 206
Lect
Lab 401
Lab 402
Lab 403
Lab 404

2 :00-2:50
8:00-9:50
8:00- 9:50
10:00-ll:SO
10:00-ll :50
12:00-1:50
12:00-1:50
2:00-2:50
8:00-9:50
8:00-9 :50
10:00-ll :50
10:00-ll :SO

Tu
Tu

Th
Th

Tu
Th
Tu
Tu
Tu

Th
Th
Th

Tu
Th

staff
staff
Thomerso n
Thomerson
Thomerson
Thomerson
Thomerson

�WINTER

GENERAL ST U DIE S AREA A

Cou rse No.- Hou rs D escr ipti ve Title
T ime
[d w. Alto n E. St. Louis

·-----

·· o ;; y~·- -·

1
20 1b-3 Ma n s Biological Inheritance .
Day stude nt e nrolls in lec ture and one lab.
9:0{}-9:50
Tu Th
Lect
Lab 201
M
8 :0{}-9 :50
Lab 202
8:00-9:50
F
Lab 203
8 :0{}-9 :50
Lab 204
M
10:00- 10:50
w
10:0{}-10:50
Lab 205
Lab 206
10:0{}-10 :50
F
Lab 207
12 :0{}-J :50
M
Lab 208
12 :0{}-l :50
w
F
Lab 209
12 :00-1 :50
Lect·
Lab E2 10
6 :2{}-8: 10
Tu Th
Lect·
6:2{}-8:10
M
Lab E21 1
9:0{}-9:50
Tu Th
Lect
M
Lab 401 8 :0{}-9 :50
Lab 402 8 :0{}-9 :50
Lab 403 8 :0{}-9:50
F
Lab 404 10 :00-10 :50
M
Lab 405 10 :00-10:50
Lab 406 10:0{}-10:50
F
Lab 407 12 :0{}-l :50
M
Lab 408 12:00-l :50
Lab 409 12:00- 1:50
F
Lect·
Tu Th
Lab E410 6:20-8 :10
201c- 3 Man's Biological Inheritance .
2 :0{}-2 :50
Tu Th
l.ec t
2 :0{}-3 :50
M
Lab 201
2:0{}-3 :50
Lab 202
2 :0{}-3 :50
F
Lab 203
Tu Th
2 :0{}-2 :50
Lect
3:004:50
M
Lab 401
Lab 402 3 :0{}-4 :50
F
Lah 403 3:00-4 :50
312-3 Conservation of Natural Resources .
2:0{}-2 :50
F
M
001
33 1-3 Climate .

w

w

w
w

w

w
w

w

Place

(GSA ) 9

·······--··········j·;~~t-~-~-~t~;

AUD 200
SCI 111
SCI Ill
SCI Ill
SCI Ill
SCI Ill
SCI Ill
SCI Ill
SCI Ill
SCI Ill

R. Pa rker
R. Parker
R. Parker
staff
Broadbooks
Broadbooks
Broadbooks
staff
staff
staff

SCI Ill

Broadbooks

SCI l!O
ESL 130
ES L 116
ESL ll6
ES L 116
ESL ll 6
ESL ll6
ESL ll6
ESL ll6
ESL ll 6
ESL ll6

staff
Ratzlaff
Thomerson
Thomerson
Thomerson

Ratzlaff
staff
sta ff
staff
staff
sta ff

F.SL ll6
SCI 200
SCI Ill
SCI 1l1
SCI 111
ES L liS
ESL ll6
F.SL ll6
F.SL ll6

staff
Savo stin

Savostin

staff
staff
Davis
Da vis

staff
staff

GC 141 2

staff

9:00- 9:50
M w
GC 0306
Lect
8:00-9:50
Tu
GC 0306
Lab 001
9:00- 10:50
Th
GC 0306
Lab 002
LeC't ·
T u Th
6:20- 8 :10
GC 0306
Lab 1·:003
356-3 Astronomy .
3:0{}-3:50
M
F
001
w
GC 2306
358a-3 Ana lysis of Physical Systems .
3 :0{}-3 :50
Tu Th
SCI 103
201
3:0{}-4:50
F
SCI 007
363b-3 Philosophy of Science (Same as GSC 363b ) .
9 :0{}-9 :50
M w F
GC 1410
001

Kazeck
Kazeck
Kazeck

Day s iUd e nt enrolls in lec ture and one lab.

Bognar

McAneny
staff
sta ff
Li ve rgood

MAN ' S SOC I AL I NHERITANCE
AND
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES ( GSB )
IOl a-3 Survey of Western Tradition -.. .....• . .•..•. . .•.. ... •
l :00- l :50
M w F
GC 1410
001
ll :00- ll :50
M w F
ANA 104
201
11:00-12:15
ANA 104
202
Tu Th
2 :0{}-3: 15
ANA 104
203
Tu Th
6:20-7:35
E204
Tu Th
ANA 104
401
10:0{}-10:50
M w F
ESL 205
1 :0{}-l :50
402
F.SL 205
M w F
8 :2{}-9 :35
&gt;:403
Tu Th
ESL 104
IOlb-3 Survey of Western Tradition .
9 :0{}-9 :50
001
M w F
GC 1402
12:00- 12:50
GC 1410
002
M w F
2 :00- 2:50
003
M w F GC 1410
AUD 200
201
ll :25-12: 40
Tu Th
1 :0{}-1 :50
202
M w F
SCI 200
1·:203
AUD 200
6:20-7 :35
M w
ESL 103
401
9 :00- 9 :50
M w F
12:00- 1:15
Tu Th
ESL 130
402
8 :20- 9:35
Tu T h
F.SL 205
1·:403

Kircher
Yarbrough
Koepke
Koepke
Bognar
Fogel
Schwar tz

Fogel
Gallaher
Erickson
Astou r

Kimball
Branz
Huan g

Kalish
Keleher
Kali &lt;h

�10

GENERA L STU DI ES AREA B ( CS B )

~d~~se 1;1t~-;-~~us~. L~~i~.ripti'Ti~itle ·················n~y~·- ·

············ ··p"J~-~-~- --·

···· ······ ·· ··"i~~-~t-~~-~-t~~

!Olc- 3 Survey of Western Tradition .
001
I :00-2: 15
Tu Th
GC 04!1
201
10:00-10:50
M W F
AUD 200
E202
8:20-9: 35
Tu Th
ANA 104
401
10:00-!1: 15
ESL 130
Tu Th
£402
6:20-7:35
M W
ESL 105
201a-3 Culture, Society, Behavior .. .... ... ............... ... ... .. ... .. .
2:00-2:50
M W F
GC 1414
001
M W F AUD 200
2 :00-2:50
201
SCI 102
M W
£202
8:20- 9:35
M W F ESL !!5
401
ll :00-ll :50
8:20-9: 35
Tu Th
ESL liS
.:402
201b-3 Culture, Society, Behavior .
·· · ···· ··· · ··· ······
GC 3302
10:00-10:50 MTu Th
001
AUD 200
201
3:00- 3 :50
M WTh
202
9:00-9:50
M w F ANA 104

Steckling
Pearson

Huang
Kalish
Wink
Schusky
J. Collins
L. Collins
Hayes
Hayes
More
Campisi

R. Campbell
M w
6:20-7 :35
SCI 102
0. Collins
401
1:00-1:50
M w F
ESL 130
Grubb
402
3:00-3 :50
M w F
ESL 205 E. Rudwick
&gt;:403
8 :20-9: 35
Tu Th
ESL 103
Grubb
201c-3 Culture, Society, Behavior .
.. ........ ....... .... .....
9:00-!0:1 5
001
Tu Th
GC 1402
staff
201
12 :00-12: 50
M w F
AUD 200
staff
401
2 :00-2:50
M w F
ESL liS
staff
£402
5 :30-8:!0
Tu
ESL 215
staff
211a-3 Political Economy
...... . ....... .. . . .. .. ..
001
8:00-8 :50
M w F
GC 0312
Drake
002
12 :00-12:50 MTu Th
GC 0312
staff
201
9:00-9:50
M w F
AUD 200
staff
202
12:00-12:50
M w F
ANA 104
staff
&gt;:203 .
M
ANA 101
5:30-8:10
staff
£204
5:30- 8:10
Th
SCI 002
staff
9:00-9:50
M w F
401
ESL 205
staff
402
12 :00-12 :50 MTu Th
ESL 205
staff
£403
5:30-8 :10
w
ESL 205
staff
Tu
1:404
5:30-8:10
ESL 205
staff
211b-3 Political Economy ---- --·---- -·· ·· ····· ·· ···· ···!0:00-10:50 MTu Th
001
GC 0312
Lovell
201
2 :00-2 :50
MTu Th
AUD 100
Maie r
5:30-8:10
£202
w
ANA 104
Kerr
401
8 :00-8: 50
Schwab
M WTh
ESL 104
£402
5:30-8:10
Tu
Honan
ESL liS
211c-3 Political Economy
··· ······· ···· ··- ···
10:00-10:50 MTu Th
001
GC 2405
Drake ,
Schwab
201
1:00-1:50
MTu Th
AUD 100
Maier
£202
5:30-8:10
ANA 101
Nash
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MTu Th
ESL 103
401
1:00-1:50
Honan
300a-3 Hist&amp;ry of the U nited States
001
11 :00-ll :50
M W F
GC 04!1
Williman
£002
8:20-9:35
M W
GC 04!1
Williman
300b-3 History of the United States .
001
10 :00-!0 :50
M W F GC 04ll
Weiss
£002
8:20-9:35
Tu Th
GC 04!1
Branz
.............. .. .
300c- 3 History of the United States
001
I :00-1 :50
M W F
GC 04!1 Riddleberger
£002
6:20-7 :35
M W
GC 04!1
Rosenthal
311-3 Economic Development of the U nited States
001
!I :00-!1 :50
M W F' GC 2405
staff
£002
5:30-8 :10
Tu
GC 2405
Livingston
312-3 Comparative Economic Systems.
£001
5: 30-8:10
M
GC 2405
staff
331-3 The American Educational Systems ..... .... ........ ......... ..
001
10:00-10:50
M W F
GC 0314
Wheat
002
ll :00-12:15
Tu Th
GC 1414
Hileman
t:003
5:30-8:10
Tu
GC 0314
C. Lee
10:00-ll:15 M W
GC 1414
004
C. Lee
005
3:00-3:50
M W F
GC 0314
Wheat.
341-3 Marriage
...... .. .. .. .............. ............. .. .. .... .
001
2:00-2:50
M W F
GC 04ll
Taylor
351 b-3 Geographic and Cultural Background of Developing Africa
001
9:00-9:50
M W F
GC 0403 E. Schusky
354-3 Industrial Economic Geography .
001
ll :00-ll :50
M W F GC 1412
Koepke
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8:20-9:35
Tu Th
GC 1412
staff
401
9:00-9:50
M W F
ESL 208B
Schwartz
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�WINTER

GENERAL ST U DIE S AREA B ( GSB )

356--3 The Consumer and the Economy .......... ......... .. ...... ...... .
GC 3315
001
9:00- 9:50
MTu Th
359a- 3 Society and State .
M WTh
GC 2410
001
2 :00-2:50

JJ

staff
MaceRemmling

385-3 Contemporary Political Isms .
001
5:30-8:10
M

GC 2403

Maier

MAN'S INSIGHTS AND
A P PRE CIA T I 0 N S (GSC)
100-3 Music Understanding .
ll :00-ll :50
001
002
2:00-2:50
10:00- ll :15
201
6:20-7:35
E202
1:00-1:50
401
101-3 Art Appreciation _
001
9:00-9:50
ll :00-ll :50
002
4:20-5:35
003
8:00-8:50
201
6:20-7:35
E202
12:00-12:50
401
6:20-7:35
E402
151-3 Introduction to Poetry .
10:00-10:50
001
ll :00- ll :50
002
ll
:00-ll :50
003
10:00-10:50
201
6:20-7:35
&gt;:202
401
10:00-10:50
10:00-10:50
402
6:20- 7:35
£403
152-3 Logic ..................... .

M w F
M w F
Tu Th
M w
M w F

GC 1402
GC 1402
AUD 200
FAC 203
ESL 212

M w F
M w F
Tu Th
M w F
M w
M w F
Tu Th

Hilberry
LB 0044
LB 0044 M. J. Smith
GC 04ll
Kemper
staff
AUD 200
staff
AUD 100
Kutzik
ESL 130
staff
ESL 221

MTu
F
M w F
M w F
MTu
F
M w
ThF
M
ThF
M
Tu Th

GC 2302
GC 2309
GC 2307
AUD 100
AUD 101
ESL 222
ESL 105
ESL 104

staff
Kresteff
Tulloss
Oberlag
Pi val

staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff

All day stude nts except Sect. 006 enroll in lecture and one quiz sec tion.

Lect
2:00-2:50
Tu Th
001
1:00- 1:50
M
002
1:00-1:50
F
003
2:00-2:50
F
004
2:00- 2:50
M
005
4:00-4:50
F
Lect
9:00-9:50
Tu Th
201
9:00- 9:50
M
202
8:00-8:50
F
203
9:00-9:50
F
1:00-1:50
Tu Th
Lect
204
1:00-1:50
M
205
12:00-12:50
F
206
1:00-1:50
F
E207
6:20-7:35
Tu Th
£208
8:20-9:35
M W
8:00-8:50
Tu Th
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401
8:00- 8:50
M
402
8:00-8:50
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403
9:00-9:50
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ll :00-ll :50
Tu Th
404
10:00-10 :50 M
405
ll :00-ll :50 M
406
ll :00-ll :50
F
£407
6:20-7:35
M W
E408
8:20- 9:35
Tu Th
203-3 Drama and the Arts of the Theater .
Tu Th
1:00-2:15
001
251a-3 Literary and Philosophical Masterpieces
MTu Th
1:00-1:50
001
12:00-12:50 MTu Th
201
1:00- 1:50
MTu Th
401
251b-3 Literary and Philosophical Masterpieces
10:00-10:50
M w F
001
M w F
3:00-3:50
002
6:20-7:35
Tu Th
r.201
6:20-7:35
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M w
255-3 Music in History .
2:00-2:50
M w F
201
335-3 Studies in Short Fiction
001
1:00-2:15
M w

GC 1402
GC 0314
GC 0314
GC 3313
GC 3313
GC 2403
ANA 104
AUD 100
AUD 100
AUD 100
ANA 104
ANB 102
AUD 100
AUD 100
AUD 100
AUD 100
ESL 205
ESL 220
ESL 220
ESL 220
ESL 205
ESL 220
ESL 220
ESL 205
ESL 220
ESL 220

Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Van Nuis
Van Nuis
Van Nuis
Van Nuis
Glossop
Glossop
Glossop
Glossop
Van Nuis
Van Nuis
Corr
Corr
Corr
Corr
Corr
Corr
Corr
Corr
Murdoch
Murdoch

GC 0314

Ko chman

GC 1402
SCI 102
ESL ll5

Rodier
Ades
Murdoch

GC 1402
GC 1402
AUD 200
ESL 130

Mogan

Kilby
McCluskey

AUD 103

Magers

GC 0408

Going

.

.

Marti

�12 GENERA L STUDIES AREA

C

(e sc)

Course No. - Hours Descriptive Title
Edw . Al ton E. St. Louis
Time

··· · -··········-- o ~;;~---- --

· ··· pj~~~ · · · ··············· i~-~ t-~~~-t~;

35 1b--4 History of World Art ....... . ... .....................
001
10:00-11 :50
Tu Th
LB 0044 J. Richardson
354a- 3 History of the Theater .
001
3:00-3:50
M w F
GC 1414
Kluth
401
2 :00-2:50
M w F
ESL 103
Pritner
357b-3 Music History and Literature
------ -----····· ········ ·---------- --- --001
3 :00-3 :50
M w F
GC 1410
Kresteff
363b--3 P hilosophy of Science (Same as GSA 363b ) .
001
9:00-9:50
M w F
GC 1410
Livergood
ORGAN I ZAT I ON AND
COMMUNICAT I ON OF

IDEAS

(GSD )

IOia- 3 English Composition .
··· ······ ······ ··---- -- -- -- ---- -- -001
9:00- 9:50
MTu ThF GC 0302
staff
002
MTu ThF GC 0303
9:00-9:50
staff
003
MTu ThF
11:00-11:50
GC 0302
staff
201
9:00-9 :50
MTu ThF
AUD 102
staff
202
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
ANA 101
staff
203
11 :00-11 :50
MTu ThF
AUD 101
staff
401
9:00-9:50
MTu ThF
ESL 11 2
staff
402
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
ESL 208B
staff
403
11 :00- 11:50
MTu ThF
ESL 106
staff
101b--3 English Composition .
001
8:00-8 :50
MTu ThF
GC 0307
staff
002
8:00- 8:50
MTu ThF
GC 0309
staff
003
9 :00-9:50
MTu ThF
GC 0307
staff
004
9:00-9:50
MTu ThF
GC 0309
staff
005
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
GC. 0307
staff
006
II :00-ll :50
MTu ThF GC 0307
staff
007
12:00-12:50
GC 0314
MTu ThF
staff
008
I :00-1:50
MTu ThF
GC 0302
staff
009
1:00-1:50
MTu ThF
GC 0303
staff
010
2 :00-2:50
GC 0302
MTu ThF
staff
Oil
2:00-2:50
MTu ThF GC 0303
staff
012
3 :00-3:50
GC 0302
MTu ThF
staff
013
4:00-4:50
GC
0303
MTu ThF
staff
8 :00-8:50
MTu ThF
201
AUD 101
staff
9:00-9 :50
202
MTu ThF
ANB 102
staff
9:00-9:50
203
MTu ThF
ANB 202
staff
10:00- 10:50
204
MTu ThF
ANA 100
staff
10:00- 10:50
205
MTu ThF
ANB 102
staff
206
AUD 100
ll :00-ll :50
MTu ThF
staff
207
AUD 101
12 :00-12:50
MTu ThF
staff
208
1:00-1:50
MTu ThF
AUD 101
staff
209
2 :00-2:50
MTu Th F
AUD 102
staff
210
2:00-2:50
MTu ThF
SCI 103
sta ff
211
3 :00-3:50
AUD 100
MTuWTh
staff
212
3:00-3:50
AUD 101
MTuWTh
staff
213
4:20-6:10
AUD 100
Tu Th
staff
214
4 :20-6:10
Tu Th
AUD 101
staff
E215
6: 20-8: 10
AU D 103
Tu Th
staff
E216
6:20-8 :10
Tu Th
ANB 102
stall
&gt;:217
8 :20-10:10
Tu Th
SCI 103
staff
E218
8:20-10:10
Tu Th
SCI 102
staff
401
8 :00-8:50
MTu ThF
ESL 222
staff
402
8:00-8:50
MTu ThF
ESL 103
staff
403
9:00- 9:50
M
ESL 221
staff
9:00- 9 :50
Tu ThF
ESL 104
staff
404
10 :00-10 :50
ESL 203
MTu ThF
staff
405
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
ESL 103
staff
406
ll :00- ll :50
ESL 215
MTu ThF
staff
407
ll :00-11:50
ESL 221
MTu ThF
staff
408
12:00-12:50
ESL 222
MTu T hF
staff
409
1 :00- 1:50
ESL 221
MTu ThF
staff
410
1:00-1:50
ESL 224
MTu ThF
staff
411
2 :00-2:50
ESL 221
MTu ThF
staff
412
2:00-2:50
ESL 220
MTu ThF
staff
413
ESL 220
3:00-3:50
MTuWTh
staff
414
3 :00-3:50
MTuWTh
ESL 221
staff
415
4:20-6 :10
M w
ESL 221
staff
416
4:20-6:10
M w
ESL 222
staff
E417
6 :20-8 :10
M w
ESL 103
staff
E418
6 :20-8 :10
M w
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staff
103-3 Oral Communication of Ideas ·--·- ---··· ····· ·· ···
001
9 :00-9:50
M w F
GC 2403
Robinson
002
10 :00-10 :50
M w F
GC 0304
H. White

�WI N TER

GENERAL S TUDIE S AREA 0

Course No.- Hours Descriptive Title ...
Time
Edw. Alton E. St. Louis

·----·· ···· · · o ~;;~·--····

003
004
005
006
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
E2 12
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
E412

ll :00- ll :50
l :00- l :50
2:00- 2:50
3:00--4 :15
8:00-8 :50
9:00- 9:50
9:00- 9:50
10:00--10:50
10:00--10:50
ll :00--ll :50
12:00-12:50
1:00--l :50
2:00- 2:50
3:00-3 :50
4 :55- 6:10
6 :20--7 :35
9:00--9:50
10:00--10:50
10:00--10:50
ll :00-ll :50
11:00-11:50
12:00--12:50
l :00-1:50
1:00- 1:50
2 :00--2:50
2:00-2:50
4 :00- 5:15
6:20--7 :35

M w F
M w F
M w F
Tu Th
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w
Tu Th
M w F
M w F
M w F
M w F
111 w F
111 w F
111 w F
M w F
111 w F
M w F
Tu Th
Tu Th

..

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(o so )

13

·········· ········· j"~-~ t-~~~-t~~

GC 0314
GC 0307
GC 0307
GC 0307
AUD 103
AUD 103
ANB 103
ANB 202
ANB 103
ANB 103
ANB 103
ANB 103
A B 103
ANB 102
ANB 103
ANB 103
ESL 212
ESL 21 2
ESL 106
ESL 104
ESL 105
ESL 105
ESL 105
ESL 106
ESL 105
ESL 106
ESL 105
ESL 212

112a-3 Introduction to Mathematics .
··· ······ ·········· · ·
001
1 :00--1:50
111 w F
GC 2306
201
ll :00- 11:50
111 WThF SCI 200
l :00- l :50
401
111 WThF ESL 215
112b-3 Introduction to Mathematics .
001
ll :00--ll :50
M w F
GC 3316
201
ll :00-11:50
M w F
AUD 200
E202
8 :20--9 :35
Tu Th
SCI 002
401
ll :00-ll :50
111 w F
ESL 130
8:20- 9:35
£402
111 w
ESL 204
112c-3 Introduction to Mathematics ..... ..... .... ........ ...... .
201
2:00-2:50
M w F
SCI 002
401
12:00--12:50 111 w F
ESL 20~
114a-3 College Algebra .
1·:001
8 :20- 9:35
111 w
GC 0312
002
2:00-2:50
111 w F GC 2306
201
9:00--9:50
111 w F SCI 002
202
10:00--10:50 111 w F
SCI 002
401
2 :00- 2:50
M WTh
ESL 215
402
3:00- 3 :50
111 WTh
ESL 215
114b-3 College Algebra .
001
10:00--10:50
M w F
GC 2303
002
2:00--2 :50
111 w F GC 0304
201
8 :00- 8 :50
111 w F SCI 003
202
9:00--9 :50
111 w F SCI 103
203
1:00--1:50
M w F
SCI 003
E204
8 :20- 9:35
111 w
SCI 003
9 :00-9 :50
ESL 204
M w F
401
10:00--10:50
M w F
ESL 204
402
6:20--7:35
111 w
ESL 204
£403
114c- 3 Trigonometry ...
9 :00-9:50
111 w F HUM 107
201
114d-3 Statistics .
GC 2306
8:00--8 :50
M w F
001
111 w F ANA 101
8:00- 8:50
201
111 w F SCI 002
202
ll :00--11:50
5:30- 8:10
Tu
SCI 002
E203
ESL 204
ll :00-ll :50
111 w F
401
ESL 205
,;402
5 :30--8: 10
111
123b-3 Elementary French
--- ----------- ········
MTu
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GC
2412
9:00-9:50
001
MTu Th
GC 2412
3 :00-3 :50
002
MTu Th
AUD 101
9:00--9:50
201
2 :00- 2:50
MTu Th
AUD 101
202
AUD 101
Tu Th
6:20-7:35
£203
ESL 222
6: 20--7:35
111 w
E401
126b-3 Elementary German
····· ······-·--- -- ------····
GC
2412
MTu
Th
ll :00-ll :50
001
GC 2405
MTu Th
4:00-4:50
002

Carey
Kluth
Kluth
Kluth
Hawkins
Hawkins

Mary Smith
Hawkins

Mary Smith
Mary Smith
Fix

Mary Smith
Fix
Fix
Fix

staff
Birdman
Aschemeyer
Birdman
Pritner
Aschemeyer

Birdman
Aschemeyer
Pritner

VanDer Poll
Aschemeyer

Van Oer Poll
VanDer Poll
English
Forcade
Verderber
English
Ph illips
Phillips
Bennewitz

Verderber
Forcade
Verderber
English
Ewin g
Goering

Fudurich
Rutledge
Rutledge

Ewing
English
Gwillim
Fudurich
Holden
Forcade
Corcoran
Corcoran

staff
staff
Schwier

staff
staff
staff
Luan
Luan

staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff

�14

G E N ERAL S T U DIE S AR EA [) ( G S D )

~d~~se A~t~-;-~~uS~. L~~;~ ript i ':firJ:tie ······ · ·-·· ·· · · ··o~y~

126b-3

Elementary
201
202
r.203
401
402
40.3
r.404

.............. ·· pj~~~ ..................i~~·r;:~~-t~;

German ----------------- --------- -------------- ------ ---- ----------------11:00- 11:50 MTu Th
AUD 102
staff
3:00-3:50
MTu Th
AUD 102
staff
6:20- 7:35
Tu Th
AUD 102
staff
9:00-9:50
MTu Th
ESL 222
staff
II :00- 11 :_50 MTu Th
ESL 222
staff
I :00- 1:50
MTu Th
ESL 222
staff
6:20-7:35
M W
ESL 221
staff

136b-3 Elementary Russian -------- ----- --------- -- ----- --------- --------- --- --- -·--- --- -------·-001
1 :00-1:50
GC 2412
MTu Th
staff
E401
8:20- 9:35
ESL 222
M w
staff
140b-3 Elementary Spanish _
001
10:00-10:50 MTu Th
GC 2412
staff
2:00-2:50
MTu Th
002
GC 3316
staff
10:00- 10:50 MTu Th
201
ANA 101
staff
r.202
6:20-7:35
AUD 102
M w
staff
ESL 224
401
10:00-10:50 MTu Th
staff
ESL 208B
E402
6:20-7:35
staff
M w
HEALTH AND PHYSICAL
D E V E L 0 P M E N T ( GSE)
!Old-! Life Saving _
Pool rental fee $6, payable first class meeting.
£201
7:00-9:00
Th
GYM 102
Archangel
102-1 Physical Fitness (Men)
201
10:00-10:50 M W
GYM 102
Brick
202
10:00- 10:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
Brick
Tu Th
401
9:00- 9:50
ESL 009
Moehn
Tu Th
402
I :00-1:50
ESL 009
Luedke
104b-1 Badminton (Men )
E201
6:20- 8:10
M
GYM 102
Kesl
401
1:00-1:50
M W
ESL 009
Brick
104c-l Basketball (Men) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ---201
8:00- 8:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
Kesl
401
2:00- 2:50
Tu Th
ESL 009
Brick
104d-1 Bowling (Men) -- -- ---- -- -- -- -- ---- -- ---- ------ -- ---- -- ---- ---- -- ------ -- -- ---- -- -- --- __ __ _
Lane rental fee $6, payable first class meeting.

201
202

9:00-9:50
W F
GYM 102
Brick
9:00-9:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
Brick
401
9:00-9:50
Tu Th
ESL 009
Luedke
104i-1 Volleyball (Men) . --- -------- ---------------------------------------------------------------401
2:00-2:50
M W
Brick
ESL 009
E402
6:20-8:10
Tu
Marks
ESL 009
104m-! Fencing (Men)
401
12:00-12:50
M w
ESL 009
Marks
104r-l Stunts and Tumbling (Men)
201
12:00- 12:50
Luedke
w F GYM 102
104u-l Wrestling (Men)
Brick
201
I :00-1:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
401
II :00-11:50
Moehn
Tu Th
ESL 009
llld-1 Life Saving (Women)
Pool rental fee $6, payable first class meeting.
E201
7:00-9:00
Th
GYM 102
Archangel
112-1 Basic Body Movement (Women)
201
2:00-2:50
M W
GYM 102
Archangel
401
II :00-11:50 M W
ESL 009
Marks
113d-1 Beginning Contemporary Dance (Women)
201
9:00-9:50
Tu Th
GYM 102 S. Carpenter
401
12:00-12:50
Tu Th
ESL 009 S. Carpenter
113e-1 Intermediate Contemporary Dance (Women)
9:00- 9:50
201
Tu Th
GYM 102 S. Carpenter
401
12:00-12:50
Tu Th
ESL 009 S. Carpenter
114b-1 Badminton (Women) ····-······· ·· · ········ ············· · ···············
E201
6:20-8:10
Th
GYM 102
Marks
114c-l Basketball (Women)
201
2:00-2:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
Marks
3:00- 3:50
401
M w
ESL 009
Marks
114i-1 Volleyball (Women)
9:00-9:50
201
M w
GYM 102
Marks
Tu
E40l
6:20-8:10
ESL 009
Marks
114m-! Fencing (Women)
401
12:00-12:50 M w
ESL 009
Marks
201-3 Healthful Living _
001
12:00-12:50
M w F
GC 1402
Spear
201
I :00-1:50
M w F
ANA 104
Klein
E202
5:30-8:10
M
ANA 104
Luedke
401
3:00-3:50
M w F
ESL 115
staff

�r~.~:.r_:L~
Edw.

- .......,..

Alton E. St. Louis

T ime

A C C 0 UN TIN G

ACCOUNTI NG (ACCT )
······ · ·· o~y~-- -· ··

15

···· i; i ~~~ ·············-- - -- f~ ~-t ;~ ~~~-~

(ACCT )

25la- 4 Elementary Accounting I .
001
11:00- 11:50
MTuW F
Bedel
GC 3303
201
9:00-9 :50
MTuW F
staff
ANA 100
E202
8:20-10:10
M w
AN A 100
staff
401
9: 00-9:50
MTuWTh
ESL 203
Terre
E402
8:20-10:10
M w
ESL 203
staff
25lb-4 Elementary Accounting II .
Bedel
001
8 :00-8:50
MTuW F
GC 3303
Bedel
002
12:00-12:50
MTuW F
GC 3303
201
8 :00-8 :50
MTu ThF
ANA 100 Schuchardt
staff
202
2 :00-2: 50
MTu ThF
ANA 100
E203
6:20- 8:10
M w
ANA 100
staff
E204
8 :20-10 :10
Tu Th
ANA 100
staff
401
8 :00-8 :50
MTuWTh
ESL 203
Terre
402
2 :00- 2:50
MTu ThF
ESL 203
staff
E403
6:20-8:10
M w
ESL 203
staff
E404
8 :20-10 :10
Tu Th
ESL 204
staff
251 c- 4 Elementary Accounting III
. ... .. .. . .. . .. ....
001
9 :00-9:50
M WThF
GC 3303
Mains
ANA 100 Schuchardt
201
II :00- 11:50
MTu ThF
ANA 100 Schuchardt
E202
6 :20-8:10
Tu Th
401
II :00-11:50 MTu WTh
ESL 203
Terre
staff
E402
6:20-8:10
Tu Th
ESL 202
331-4 Tax Accounting.
Small
001
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
GC 3303
E002
6:20-8 :10
M w
GC 3303
staff
341-4 Cost Accounting .
MTu ThF
Small
001
1:00- 1:50
GC 3303
6 :20-8 :10
Tu Th
E002
staff
GC 3303
351b-4 Intermediate Accounting II
GC 2304
001
9:00-9:50
MTuWTh
Milles
002
2 :00- 2:50
MTu ThF
GC 2304
Small
&gt;:003
8:20-10:10
M W
GC 2304
Mains
E004
8: 20-10 :10
Tu Th
GC 2304
staff
432-4 Problems in Federal Taxation ....................... .. ... ............ .
001
10 :00-10:50
MTuWTh
GC 2304
Milles
GC 2304
Mains
E002
6: 20-8:10
M w
442-4 Advanced Cost Accounting ................... .
MTuWTh
GC 2304
Schmitt
001
11 :00-11:50
Schmitt
Tu Th
6:20-8:10
GC 2304
E002

AEROSPACE STUDIES

(AS )

302- 3 Growth and Development of Aerospace Power .
001
12:00-12:50 M W F
GC 2410

ANTHROPOLOGY

Horvath

(ANTH )

304-4 The Origins of Civilization .. ........ ..... .......... .. .............. ... .
].
001
12:00-12 :50 MTuWTh
GC 0408
305b- 3 Peoples and Cultures of the World I
001
11:00-11:50 M WTh
GC 0406
405-4 Social Anthropology .
··· ···· ·· ···· · ·· ···
001
3:00-3:50
MTuWTh
GC 0406
409-4 Anth ropology and Modern Life ...
EOOI
6 :20-8 :10
M W
GC 0406

APPLIED SCIENCE

Collim
Voget
Vogel
Voget

(AP S)

IOla-3

Graphics .
201
I :00- 2:50
M W F
Tu Th
401
6 :20-9: 10
IOlb--3 Graphics ............................... ....... .
201
10:00- 11:50
M W F

ART
I OOa-5

ANA 108
ESL 203

M. Bishop
M. Bishop

ANA 108

M. Bishop

(ART )

Basic Studio .
201
6: 20-9:50
IOOb--5 Basic Studio ... .......... .
201
8 :00-9:50
8:00-8 :50
202
I :00-2 :50
I :00- 1:50
401
1 :00-3:50

w w

FAA 102 M. J. Smith

MTuWTh
F
MTuWTh
M

W

F
F

FAA 102
FAA 102
SCI 015
SCI 015
ESL 214

Kutzik
staff
Marcell
Marcell
Milovich

�J6

ART ( ART )

Course No.- Ho urs Dcscriptiv{' T itle .
Edw. Alto n E. St. Louis
Time

......... n.,;,·y~·-···

201a- 4

Drawing and Composition ....
201
1:00- 2:50
MTuWTh
Drawing a nd Composition
201
10 :00- ll :50 MTuWTh
203b-4 Beginning Ceramics .................. .
201
8 :00-9:50
MTuWTh
300a-4 Art Education
201
l :00-2:50
M W F
202
3 :00- 4:50
M W F
300b- 4 Art Education
201
9:00- 10 :50
M W F
401
10:00-11:50
M W F
305b-4 Advanced Ceramics .
MTuWTh
201
12 :00- l :50
3 10b-4 Painting
l :00- 2 :50
MTuWTh
201
325a,b,c-4 Studio

FAA 102

M. J. Smith

FAA 102

Huntley

GYM 005

Cannon

20 1b- 4

201

FAA 203 Buddemeyer
FAA 203
Altvater
FAA 203 Buddemeyer
ESL 214
Milovich
GYM 005

Cannon

FAA 202

Huntley
staff

Arranged

358b- 4

Prints
MTuWTh
201
3:00-4:50
365- 4 Art Education in the Secondary School .
001
11 :00-12:50
M W F
393b-4 Sculpture
10 :00-ll :50 MTuWTh
201
401-4 Resea rch in Pai nting .
201
6:20-8 :10
M W
405-4 Studio in Sculpture .
201
Ar-ranged
410-4 R esea rch in Prints
201
Arranged
420-4 Resea rch in Pottery .
201

566-4

FAA 103 J. Richardson
SL 1209

Buddemeyer

SCI 015

Marcell

FAA 202

Freund
Marcell
Richardson

A rra.nged

Cannon

Resea rch in Art Education
201
Arranged

BOTANY

Altvater

(BOT }

General Botany .
10 :00-10: 50
Lect
l :00-2 :50
201
310- 5 Plant Anatomy .
Lect
ll :00-ll :50
l :00-2 :50
001
350-4 Plants In Relation to Man
401
12:00- 12: 50
202- 5

BUSINESS

Tu Th
M w F

SCI 002
SCI 110

Kumler

M w F
Tu Th

HUM 107
SCI 110

Kuml er

MTu

ThF

ED U CA T I 0 N

ESL 112

Kuml er

Kumler
Davis

(BS ED )

201b-3 Typewriting .. .......... . ... ..........
001
l :00-l :50
MTu ThF
GC 0409
10:00-10:50
ANA 103
201
MTu ThF
E202
8 :20-10:10
Tu Th
ANA 103
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
401
ESL 223
8 :20-10:10
i-:402
Tu Th
ESL 223
221b-4 Shorthand and Transc ription
2:00-2 :50
MTu ThF
GC 0409
001
ANA 103
9:00-9:50
201
MTu ThF
6:20-8: 10
ANA 103
E202
Tu Th
9:00-9:50
ESL 223
401
MTu ThF
E402
6:20-8 :10
Tu Th
ESL 223
241-2 Duplicating ··· · ····· ······ ·····
............... ..........
2:00-2 :50
201
Tu Th
ANA 103
E202
6:20-8 :10
w
ANA Ill
401
8 :00-8 :50
Tu Th
ESL 223
402
10:00-11:50
s ESL 223
304- 3 Advanced Typewriting .
. ...... ........ ...... .
001
ll:00- 11:50
MTu ThF
GC 0409
1·:002
8 :20-10:10
GC 0409
M w
11 :00- ll :50
201
MTu ThF
ANA 103
1·:202
8:20-10:10
M w
ANA 103
401
ll :00-ll :50
MTu ThF
ESL 223
E402
8:20-10:10
M w
ESL 223
324a-4 Advanced Shorthand and Transcription .
ThF
10:0010:50
001
MTu
GC 0409
E002
6:20--8:10
M w
GC 0409
201
I :00- 1:50
MTu Thf
ANA 103
E202
6 :20-8 :10
M w
ANA 103

staff
staff
staff
Houser

staff
Sobolik
Palmer

Hansel
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
Sobolik
staff
Brady
staff
staff
staff

K. Martin
K. Martin
staff
staff

�WINTER

BUSINESS EDUCATION ( BS ED )

Course No. - Hours Descriptive T itle
Edw . Alton E. St. Loui:;
Time

401
1:00-1:50
MTu ThF
ESL 223
6 :20- 8:10
E402
M W
ESL 223
341-4 Calculating Machines _
001
12:00-12:50
MTu ThF
GC 0409
404-3 Teaching Shorthand and Transc ription ----- ------ ---- ------E001
5:30-8:10
W
GC 0409
427- 4 Records Administration _
E001
6:20- 8:10
Tu Th
GC 0409
503-4 Tests and Measurements in Business Education
1-:001
R:20-10:10
Tu Th
GC 0409

CH EMIST RY
II 0-4

17

· ················ n~ y~ ················· p j~~ ~ ············ · ··· ·· T;~~l~-~-~t~;

staff
staff
Sobolik
Palmer
Palmer
Hou ser

( CHEM )

General and Inorga nic Chemistry _
Lect
2:00-2 :50
M W F
SCI 200
Parrill
Lab 201
2 :00-4 :SO
Tu
SCI 205
Parrill
Lab 202
2:00- 4 :SO
Th
SCI 205
Parrill
lll a-5 Chemical Principles and Inorganic Chemistry _
Phillips
Lect
6:00-7 :15
M W
SCI 200
Lab E201
7 :25-8 :15
M
SCI 201
staff
7:25-10:15
W
SCI 205
staff
Lab 202
4:00-4:50
W
SCI 201
staff
staff
2 :00-4:50
M
SCI 205
Lect
5:30-7: 10
M W
ESL 112
Stallard
Lab E401 7 :15-10:05
M
ESL 125
Stallard
Ill b-5 Chemical Principles and Inorganic Chemistry _
Phillips
Lect
8 :00- 8 :SO
M W F
SCI 200
staff
Lab 201
8:00- 8:50
Tu
SCI 201
8 :00-10:50
Th
SCI 205
staff
staff
Lab 202
8:00-8 :SO
Th
SCI 201
staff
8:00-10:50
Tu
SCI 205
Lab 203
12:00-12:50
F
SCI 201
staff
ll :00-1 :SO
W
SCI 205
staff
Lab 204
12 :00- 12:50 M
SCI 201
staff
11 :00-1: SO
F
SCI 205
staff
Rygg
Lect
8 :00- 8 :SO
MTu ThF
ESL 115
Ra nds
Lab 401 12:00-2 :SO
M
ESL 125
Lab 402 12 :00-2 :SO
W
ESL 125
Rands
Rygg
Lab 403 8:00-10: 50
W
ESL 125
lll c-5 Chemical Principles and Inorganic Chemistry ___
Lect
12 :00- 12 :50
M W F
SCI 200
Cliff
Cli ff
Lab 201
ll :00-1 :50
Tu Th
SCI 205
Rygg
Lect
12:00- 12:50
M W F ESL 124A
Rygg
Lab 401 12 :00-2:50
Tu Th
ESL 125
305b-5 Organic Chemistry, Preprofessional ------ ---- -------- -- -- -- -- ---- --Lect
1:00-1 :SO
M W F
SCI 201
J aso n
Lab 201
2: 00-4:50
M W
SCI 206
Jason
336--4 Analytical Chemistry
Lect E
6:00-6 :50
Tu Th
SCI 200
Firsching
7 :00-9:50
Lab E201
Firsching
Tu Th
SCI 206
Lab 202
2:00- 4:50
Firsch in g
Tu T h
SCI 206
Tu Th
Lect E
6:00-6 :SO
ESL 112
Chang
Lab E401 7:00- 9 :50
ESL 125
Tu Th
Chan g
Chang
Tu Th
Lab 402 2 :00-4:50
ESL 125
34 1b-5 Organic Chemistry _
M w F
Lect
10:00- 10 :50
SCI 200
Bardolph
w F SCI 206
Bardolph
Lab 201
ll :00-1 :SO
Probst
Lect
10:00-10:50
M w F
ESL 112
Stallard
Lab 401 11:00-1 :50
w F ESL 123
Probst
Lab 402 8 :00-10:50
Tu Th
ESL 123
375-0 to 3 Chemistry Seminar _
4:00-4:50
staff
201
M
SCI 200
4:00-4:50
Rands
401
M
ESL 124A
432a-4 Instrumenta l Analytical Measurements .
Parrill
Lect E
6 :00- 6:50
M w
SCI 201
7:00-9 :SO
Lab E201
M w
SCI 203
Parrill
446-4 Qualitative Organic Analysis _
11:00- 11 :SO
Probst
Lect
M w
ESL 112
Lab 401 Arranged
Probst
ESL 123
451 a-4 Biochemistry
Lect
11 :00-ll :SO
M w F
SCI 103
Jaso n
ll :00-1 :SO
Lab 201
Tu
SCI 206
Jason
461b-4 Physical C hemistry _
Lect
10:00-10:50
M w F
SCI 003
White
Lab 201
8:00- 10:50
White
Tu
SCI 203
Lect
10:00-10 :50
ESL 124A
M w F
Rands
Rands
Lab 401 ll :00- 1:50
Tu
ESL 123

�18

COMPARATIVE LITERAT U RE ( C LT )

Course No. - Hours Descriptive Title .
Edw. Alton E. St. Louis
Tim e
· · ·········n~y~- --·

C 0 M PAR AT IV E

LITER AT U R E

(C LT)

300b-4 Survey of Comparative Literature
Arranged
001
E C 0 N 0 M IC S

Guenther

(ECON )

210-5 Principles of Economics----------- -------GC 0312
Cohen
001
ll:OO-ll:SO
MTuWThF
staff
201
9:00-9:50
MTuWThF SCI 200
202
12:00-12:50
MTuWThF
ANA 100
staff
E203
5:55-8:10
M w
SCI 002
Drake
ESL 105
staff
401
9:00-9:50
MTuWThF
staff
402
12:00-12:50
MTuWThF
ESL 103
staff
E403
5:55-8:10
Tu Th
ESL 105
308-4 Economic and Business Statistics I ...... ········ ·------------····-------·-· ·
MTuWThF
GC 3313
Schwier
9:00-9:50
001
310- 4 Labor Problems _
--···· · ·· ···· · ······
GC 3315
staff
001
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
M w
GC 0314
staff
8:20-10:10
E002
315-4 Money and Banking I
GC 3302
Livingston
12:00-12:50
MTu ThF
001
Livingston
GC 0314
8:20-10:10
Tu Th
E002
Public
Finance
I:
National
_
330-4
Cohen
MTu ThF
GC 3315
1:00-1:50
001
411-4 Collective Bargaining and Dispute Settlement _
GC 0309
staff
ll :00-ll :50
MTu ThF
001
418-4 Economic History of Europe _
GC 2307
staff
£001
6:20-8:10
M w
440-4 Intermediate Micro Theory
GC 0412
staff
£001
8:20- 10:10
M W
441-4 Intermediate Macro Theory_
Schwier
001
12:00-12:50
MTu ThF
GC 0412
4 70-3 Business Cycles --------------------- ---- -- -- ----- -------- --------------- --- --001
2:00- 3:15
Tu Th
GC 2307
Glynn
EDUCATION
(ED AD)
355-4
£001
002
003
004
420-4
£001
431-4
£001
432-4
E001
456-4
£001
500-4
£001
E002
E003
503-4
001
524-4
001
525-4
£001
533-4
£001
534a-4
£001
554-4
£001
556-4
£001

ADMINISTRATION

Philosophy of Education _
Curry
5:30-8:10
ThF* GC 2405
GC 1410
Curry
I :00-2:50
Tu Th
Hoffman
2:00-3:50
M W
GC 0309
staff
GC 2410
4:20- 6:10
M W
Legal Basis of American Education _
Ackerlund
5:30-8:10
M
F* GC 2302
History of Education in the United States
Curry
5:30-8:10
M
F* GC 0412
Public Opinion, Propaganda, and Education _
5:30-8:10
ThF* GC 0413
Engbretson
School Supervision ---------- ----- --- -- -- ---------- ------- --------- -- ------ ----5:30-8:10
Tu
GC 0413
Wheat
5:30-8:10
F* GC 2302
Research Methods
staff
5:30-8:10
w
GC 0303
staff
GC 0303
5:30-8:10
M
staff
5:30-8 :10
Tu
GC 0307
Seminar in Philosophy of Education _
Villemain
9 :00-ll :40
S GC 1412
School Administration -------------Andree
S GC 0411
9 :00-ll :40
Personnel Administration ------------- ---- ----- -- ------ ---- --- ------- ------- ------- ------5:30-8:10
M
GC 0408
Reuter
School Buildings __ _
__ ---------- -----5:30-8:10
Tu
GC 0309
Wilkins
School Finance __
--- ------- ---- --------5:30-8:10
W
GC 0302
Wilkins
Contrasting Philosophies of Education ------------------------------------ --- ----5:30-8:10
M
GC 0302
C. Lee
Seminar in Educational Supervision -------------------------·-···-5:30- 8:10
Th
GC 0406
Boss

E DUCAT I ON

ELEMENTARY

(EDEL)

203-3

Understanding the Elementary School Child .
201
2:00-3:50
Tu
SCI 002
401
I :00-2:50
Th
ESL 106
* First four Fridays only.

Carpenter
Comer

�WI N TER

ED U CATION ELEMENTARY ( ED EL )

Course No.-Hou rs Descripti ve Title
Ed w. Alton E. St . Louis
Tim e

·········· o·~:;;~··

··········

J9

·· · · ·pi ~~~ ---· ···· · ····· · ·· - - ~~ ~·t;~ ~t~-~

314-4 Elementary School Methods .
. ......... ...... .... .. ...... .
£001
4:20-6:10
Tu Th
GC 3313
Comer
Kelley
002
12 :00-1:50
M W
GC 3313
Jordan
003
1 :00-2:50
Tu Th
GC 2306
337-4 Reading in the Elementary Schools ... .... ........... ......... .
001
1:00-2:50
Tu Th
GC 0307
Kelley
E002
6 :20~:10
Tu
GC 2302 Richardson
Richardson
6:2~:10
Th
GC 0302
350d-8 to 12 Kindergarten-Primary Student Teaching
001
Arranged
staff
350e-4 to 8 Advanced Kindergarten-Primary Student Teaching .
001
Arranged
staff
351d-8 to 16 Elementary Student Teaching .. .... ... ....... .......... ............ .. .... .
001
Ar ra nged
staff
351e-4 to 8 Advanced Elementary Student Teaching
001
Arran ged
staff
413-4 Children's Literature ...................................
. ...... .. ......................
E001
4:20-6:10
Tu Th
GC 1412
staff
442-4 Materials and Methods in Elementary School Science ...
E001
5: 3~:10
Tu
F* GC 0406
Bliss
505-4 Improvement of Reading Instruction ................ .. ........... .
001
9:00-11:40
S GC 0314
staff
515-4 Special Problems in the Teaching of Arithmetic in the
Elementary School ....... ...... ............ ........ .. ....... .. .. .
E001
5 :3~:10
Th
GC 0314
Steinbrook
521b-3 Diagnosis and Correction of Reading Disabilities
001
9:00-11:40
S GC 0304 Steinkellner
543-4 Teaching the Social Studies in the Elementary School
E001
5: 30-8:10
W
GC 0312 R. Carpenter
559-4 Workshop in Instructional Leadership in Elementary Education .
E001
5 :30-8:10
M
GC 2303
staff
561-4 The Elementary School Curriculum
..................... .. ..
E001
5: 3~:10
W
GC: 0309
Jordan
ED U CAT I 0 N

SEC 0 N DAR Y

(ED S)

315- 4 High School Methods .... ....... ................. .. ........ .
EOOI
8 :20-10:10
M W
GC 0406
Herbert Smith
1 :00-2 :SO
Tu Th
GC 0309
Smyers
002
003
4:20-6 :10
Tu Th
GC 3315
Madson
325d-8 to 12 Secondary Student Teaching .. ..................... ........ .
001 through 026
Arranged
Herbert Smith
001 Agriculture
014 Home Economics
002 Art
015 Industrial Education
003 Biology
016 Journalism
004 Business
017 Mathematics
005 Chemistry
018 Music
006 Economics
019 Physical Education
007 English
020 Physics
008 Foreign Lan guage
021 Sociology
009 General Science
022 Social Studies
010 Geography
023 Speech
011 Government
024 Library Service
012 Health Educa tion
025 Psychology
013 History
026 School Nursing
352e-4 to 8 Secondary Student Teaching
001 through 026
Arrar.ged
Herbert Smith
(See above listing under 352d)
488-4 Teaching the Social Studies in the Secondary School .
E001
5:30-8:10
ThF* GC 0307
Boss
505-4 Improvement of Reading Instruction ....
. .................... .
001
9:00-11:40
S GC 0314
staff
508-4 Seminar: Trends in Selected Areas in Secondary Schools .
E001
5: 3~:10
W
GC 0314
Andree
521 b-3 Diagnosis and Correction of Reading Disabilities ......................... .
001
9 :00-11:40
S GC 0304 Steinkellner
550-4 Core Curriculum in the Secondary School
....................... .
E001
5:30-8:10
Th
GC 0309
Smyers
564-4 High School Principalship ...................... ........................ .
E001
5: 30-8:10
Tu
GC: 1414
Wehling
5 70-4 Extra-Class Activities
.................... .
E001
5 :30-8:10
W
GC: 0304
Madson

ED U CAT I 0 N SPECIAL

(SP E)

410-4 Problems and Characteristics of the Mentally Retarded .
001
4:20-6:50
Tu
F* GC 0302
• First four Fridays only.

staff

�20

EDU CATION S P EC IAL ( S P E )

~d~~se Ait~-~ 11~ uS~ . fo~~si~riptivT iJ: tle · ······ · · ·· ······ o~·;.; · ··· ·· ···· · ······ pj~~~- ·· · ·· · · ···········i~~-t~:~~t~-r
413b-4 Directed Observation of the Educable Mentally Handicapped_
001
Mee ts first week with Sp E 410, then arranged
428-4 Speech Correction for tbe Classroom Teacher (Same as
SpC 428)
E00l
S:30-8:10
ThF* GC 2309
Carey
481a-4 Seminar: The Emotionally Disturbed _
W F* GC 2403
Bommarito
S :30- 8:10
E00l
481c-4 Seminar: Gifted _
F* GC 0303
s :30- 8:10
Tu
Harris
rOO!
513- 4 Organization, Administration, and Supervision of Special
Classes _
S:30-8:10
w
GC 240S
M. Tucker
1-:001

ENGLISH

(ENG)

300- 4 Principles of English Grammar _
ll :00- ll :SO
GC 3313
MTu ThF
001
4:20- 6:10
M
GC 2307
002
302b--4 Survey of English Literature _
9:00- 9:SO
MTu ThF
GC 2303
001
GC 0406
MTu ThF
2:00--2 :SO
002
8:20-10:10
M
GC 0309
E003
309a-4 Survey of American Literature .
GC 0412
9:00-9 :SO
MTu ThF
001
GC 1414
2:00--3 :SO
Tu Th
002
4:20-6:10
Tu Th
GC 2403
003
320-4 Early 19th Century Poetry _
Tu Th
GC 0403
8:20--10:10
E00l
391-3 Usage in Spoken and Written English _
9:009:SO
Tu
ThF
GC
0314
001
3:00-3 :SO
MTu ThF
GC 0413
002
4:20-S:3S
M
GC 2309
003
403-4 History of the English Language _
10:00-10 :SO
MTu ThF
GC 0309
001
404b-4 Middle English Literature (Chaucer)
MTu ThF
LB 0042
2:00--2 :SO
001
405a-4 Descriptive Linguistic (Phonology)
4:20- 6:10
M
GC 0413
001
412c-4 English Non-Dramatic Literature (18th Century)
6:20-8:10
Tu Th
GC 0408
E00l
420b- 4 American Poetry ( Modern)
l :00-l :50
MTu ThF
GC 2403
001
421c-4 English Poetry (Victorian)
4:20--6:10
GC 0406
M
001
431a- 4 Major American Writers ( 1620- 1800)
Tu Th
GC 3313
6:20--8:10
E00 l
454a-4 English Fiction (18th Century) _
10:00-10:50
GC 0302
001
MTu ThF
460d-4 English Drama (Modern)
ll :00-ll :50
MTuWTh
GC 0303
001
471a-4 Shakespeare (Plays before 1600 )
2 :00-2:50
MTuWTh
GC 0312
001
485- 4 Problems in the Teaching of English _
4:20-6:10
Tu Th
GC 2303
001
492-4 Professional Writing II _
2:00-3:50
Tu
Th
GC 0403
001
495a-4 Literary Criticism _
9:00--9:50
MTu ThF
GC 0413
001

w

w

w

w

w

staff
Going

Slattery
Graham

Stanley
Brunvand

Joost
Thompson
staff
Duncan
staff

staff
Wood
Mogan
Van Syoc
Graham

Joost
Duncan
Havens

Slattery
Dreifke
Van Syoc
Steinman
Havens

Myron Taylor
499-2 to 4 Readings in English _
001
Arranged
Slattery
500-2 Materials and Methods of Research in English _
001
4:20-6:10
M
GC 0307
Kilby
513-4 Studies in 17th Century Literature_
E00l
6:20- 8:10
M
GC 3313
Revard
520-4 Studies in Romantic Writers .
001
4:20--6:10
Tu Th
GC 0412
A des
538-4 Problems in American Literature _
001
9:00-ll :40
S GC 0412
McDermolt
598- 1 to 4 Independent Review of English and American Literature _
001
A rra.nged
Slattery

w

FOREIGN

LANGUAGES

French (Fr)
123b-1 French Conversation _
001
9:00- 9:50
* First four Fridays only.

F

GC 2412

staff

�WINTER

FOREIGN LA NGU AGE S ( FR )

21

staff
F
3: 00-3:50
GC 2412
staff
F
AUD 101
9:00-9:50
201
staff
2 :00-2 :50
AUD !01
F
202
staff
Tu Th
AUD 101
7 :45--ll: lO
E203
staff
ESL 222
7:45- 8:10
M W
E401
20lb-3 Intermediate French .
staff
M
W
F
GC
2302
ll :00-ll :50
001
staff
M W F
AUD 101
10:00-!0:50
201
staff
ESL 224
6: 20-7 :35
M W
E401
220-2 Intermediate French Conversation .................................... .
001
ll :00-ll :50
Tu Th
GC 2302
staff
201
10:00-10:50
Tu Th
AUD 101
staff
E4D1
7:45- 8:35
M W
ESL 224
staff
338b-4 French Literature from the Middle Ages th rough the 17th
Century
Morton
Tu Th
GC 2302
2:00-3 :50
001
35 l b-3 Advanced French Conversation and Composition ....
Pellegrino
2:00-3:15
M W
GC 2302
001
451b-2 French Seminar .
Pellegrino
Arranged
001
002

German (Ger)
!26b-l German Conversation .
F
GC 2412
001
ll :00-ll :50
staff
F
002
4:00-4:50
GC 2405
staff
F
201
ll :00- 11:50
AUD 102
staff
202
3:00-3:50
AUD !02
F
staff
Tu Th
staff
E203
7:45- 8 :10
AUD !02
F
ESL 222
401
9:00-9:50
staff
402
11:00-11 :50
staff
F
ESL 222
403
1:00-1 :50
staff
ESL 222
F
E404
7:45-8: lO
M W
ESL 221
staff
Intermediate
German
201b-3
·····················
M W F GC 2412
staff
2:00-2:50
001
M W F AUD 102
staff
201
10:00-10:50
2:00-2:50
staff
401
M W F
ESL 103
220-2 Intermediate German Conversation .
staff
2:00- 2:50
Tu Th
GC 2412
001
201
10:00-10:50
Tu Th
AUD 102
staff
401
2 :00-2:50
Tu Th
ESL 222
staff
313b-4 German Literatu re Before Romanticism
001
Arranged
Spahn
351b-4 Advanced German Conversation and Composition .
Arranged
001
Guenther
R ussia n (R uss)
136b-1 Russian Conversation
001
1:00-1:50
&gt;:401
201b-3
220-2

9 :45- 10 :10

Intermed iate R ussian .
E401
6:20-7:35

F
M
Tu

W

GC 2412
ESL 222

Th

ESL 222

Smith,
Michael
Smith,
Michael
Smith,
Michael

Intermediate Russian Conversation ------· --·- ---- ----- ------- -- ----·· ··
E401
7:45-8:35
Tu Th
ESL 222
Smith,
Michael

Spanish (Span)
140b-l Spanish Conversation .
10:00-10:50
F
GC 2412
001
2:00- 2:50
F
002
GC 3316
F
ANA !01
10:00-10:50
201
E202
7:45--ll:lO
M w
AUD 102
ESL 224
401
10:00-10 :50
F
7:45-8: 10
F.402
ESL 208B
M w
201b-3 Intermediate Spanish .
1:00-1:50
M w F
GC 2302
001
10 :00-10:50
M w F
AUD 103
201
11 :00-11:50
M w F
ESL 224
401
220-2 Intermediate Spanish Conversation _
001
1:00-1:50
Tu Th
GC 2302
Tu Th
201
10:00-!0:50
AUD 103
11:00-11:50
Tu Th
ESL 224
401
304b-4 Modern Spanish Literature ......
···············-····
001
2:00-3:50
Tu Th
GC 2403
311 b-3 Spanish Cul ture and Civilization
2:003:
15
w
GC 2403
001
M

staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
Heard
Goode

�22

GEOGRAPHY ( GEOG )

Course No.-Hours Descriptive Title
Edw. Alto n E. St. Louis
Tim e

GEOGRAPHY
310b-4
001
403a-4
001
404a-4
001
406a-4
001
407b-3
001
410b-3
E001
417-3
001
462a-4
001
464a-4
001
467a-4
E001
4 70a-4
001
4 70b-4
001
4 7la-4
001
490b-1
E001
521-4
E001
524-4
EOOI

(GEOG )

Introduction to Cartographic Methods ---------------------------- --1:00-2:50
Tu Th
GC 0306
Collier
Advanced Physical Geography II (Geomorphology} ----------- ------ 9 :00-ll :50
S GC 0306
Gore
Advanced Economics Geography I (Agriculture)
10:00-10:50
MTuW F
GC 1412
Collier
Advanced Cultural Geography I (Population)
9:00-9:50
M WThF
GC 1412
Baker
Advanced Cultural Geography II (Historical)
Fogel
I :00-1:50
M W F
GC 1412
Advanced Geographic Techniques (Map Intelligence}
Guffy
8:20- 9:35
M W
GC 0306
Air Photo Interpretation _
Guffy
12:00-1:50
M W
GC 0306
Advanced Regional Geography: Europe _
Bogn:tr
10:00-10:50
MTuW F
GC 0306
Advanced Regional Geography: Soviet World _
ll :00-ll :50
MTu WTh
GC 0306
Kircher
Advanced Regional Geography: Latin America _
Schwartz
6:20-8:10
Tu Th
GC 1412
Planning Concepts and Methods (Same as Govt 4 70a)
Arranged
Lossau
Planning Administration and the Planning Function in the
Public Processes (Same as Govt 4 70b)
Arranged
Mann
Regional Planning _
GC 1412
Loss au
2:00-3:15
Tu Th
Tutorial in Geography _
Collier
Arranged
Seminar in Economic Geography_
6:20-8:10
M w
GC 0306
Kircher
Seminar in Cultural Geography _
GC 2403
Baker
6:20-8:10
Tu Th

G 0 VERN MEN T

(GOVT )

210-4 American Government
ll :00-ll :50
001
ll :00-ll :50
201
E202
6:20-8:10
401
10:00-10:50
E402
6:20-8:10
340-3 The Legislative Process _
001
9:00-9:50
361-3
E001
370-4
001
371-4
001
453b-4
E001
457-4
001
458b-4
001
4 70a-4
001
4 70b-4

MTuWTh
MTuWTh

M W
MTuWTh
Tu Th

GC 3315
AUD 103
SCI 003
F:SL 104
ESL 220

Goodman
Nasr

Glaser
Honan
Braun

M

GC 04ll
Goodman
Tu Th
GC 04(}3
Selected Problems in Public Administration and Policy
Formulation .. ...
5:30-8:10
M
GC 1414
Schwab
International Relations ------------------------------------------------- _____ ------------- ·
1:00-1:50
MTuWTh
GC 3302
Glaser
Problems of American Foreign Policy _
3:00-3:50
MTuWTh
GC 3302
Glaser
The Government and Politics of the Soviet Union __
6:20-8:10
M W
GC 1412
Stahnke
Government and Politics in the Near and Middle East _
9:00-9:50
MTuWTh
GC 0406
Nasr
Government and Politics of Asia _____ ___ ·----- ---- -- --------- --- ---------------- -·
2:00- 2:50
MTu WTh
GC 0412
Stahnke
Planning Concepts and Methods (Same as Geog 4 70a)
Arranged
Lossau
Planning Administration and the Planning Function in
the Public Processes (Same as Geog 4 70b)
Arranged
Mann
History of Political Theories _
10:00- 10:50 MTuWTh
GC 0408
Mace
American Political Ideas _
8:20-9:35
M
GC 0408
Mace
Constitutional Law
ll :00-ll :50 MTuWTh
GC 0408
Kerr
Seminar in Constitutional Law .

001
484b-4
001
487b-3
E001
495b-4
001
513-3
001
Arranged
515-3 Seminar in Comparative Constitutions ............... ... .
001
Arranged

w

Ke rr

Stahnke

�WINTER

GUIDANCE ( GUID )

GUIDANCE

23

(GUID)

305-4 Educational Psychology
8:20-10:10
E001
002
9:00-10:50
I 0:00-10 :50
003
4:20--{;:10
004
12:00-1:50
005
9:00-11:40
006

Tu
Tu
MTu
Tu
Tu

Th
Th
ThF
Th
Th
S

GC
GC
GC
GC
GC
GC

0307
0314
0303
0411
1412
3302

staff
staff
staff
staff
staff
staff

4 additional sessions to be arranged

201
6:20-8:10
M
412-4 Mental Hygiene ...................... .
E001
5:30-8:10
002
9:00-11:40

staff

W
ThF*
S

GC 0304
GC 3313

staff
Rochester

4 additional sessions to be arranged

420-4 Educational Statistics .
E001
5:30-8:10

M

. .....................
GC 0304
F* GC 0411

422-4 Educational Measurements I .
F*
E001
5:30-8:10
M
Tu Th
002
1:00-2:50
003
4:20-6:10
M w
004
9 :00-11:40
S

GC
GC
GC
GC

0309
0408
3302
1414

Brinkman

staff
Soper
Eckert
Hansmeier

4 additional sessions to be arranged

426-4 Individual Inventory
.. ..................... .. ... .
001
9:00-12:00
S GC 2306
Troyer
511-4 Educational Implications of Learning Theories (Meets with
Psyc 407) .....
t:OOI
5:30-8:10
M
GC 0314
McMahon
522-4 Educational Measurements II .....
&gt;:001
5:30- 8:10
W
GC 0408
McCa!l
525-4 School Behavior Problems and their Prevention .
001
9:00-12:30
S GC 1410
staff
526-4 Techniques in Individual Guidance ................. .
1·:001
5:30- 8:10
M
GC 1410
staff
535-4 Introduction to Individual Measurement
001
5:30-8:10
W
GC 2303
Harris
536-4 Appraisal of Intelligence (Children and Adolescents) .
Rochester
t:OOI
5:30-8:10
Tu
GC 0304
Labo ratory arranged

537-4
1·:001
.:002
538-4
001
542-4
t:OOI
002
545f-4
1·:001
545j-4
t:OOI
562a-4
&gt;:001

Counseling Theory and Practice I .... ..........................
5:30-8:10
W
GC 1410
Soper
5:30-8:10
Th
GC 1410
Pancrazio
Counseling Theory and Practice II .
9:00-11:40
S GC 0312
Soper
Basic Principles of Guidance .
5:30- 8:10
M
Pancrazio
GC 0312
5 :30-8 :10
Tu
Ederle
GC 2309
Seminar in Guidance : Pupil Adjustment .
5:30-8:10
F
GC 3302
Sonstegard
201
9:00- 12:30
S AUD 100
staff
Seminar in Guidance: Organization and Administration .
5:30-8:10
W
GC 0403
Ederle
Child Development in Education .
5:30-8: 10
Th
GC 1414
Troyer

HEALTH

EDUCATION

(HED)

205-4

Principles and Foundations of Health Education
201
10:00- 10:50
M WThF
SCI 102
334s-4 First Aid ........................... .
201
3: 00-4:50
Tu Th
SCI 003
355-4 Introduction to Public Health
E401
5:30-8:10
W
ESL 205A

Klein
Marks
Spear

4 add itional sessions to be arranged

HISTORY
100-3

(HIST)

Survey of Western Civilization ----------·-- ---------- --- -- ----·· --------------------E201
6:20-7:35
AUD 103
Keleher
M w
332b-4 Medieval History .
t:OOI
8:20-10:10
M w
GC 0403
Steckling
338b--3 History of Greece ......
8:00-8:50
001
M WTh
Astour
GC 0403
* First four Fridays only.

�24

HI S TORY

( H IS T )

Course No.-Hours Descr iptive Title
Edw. A lton E. St. Louis
Time
········ ··· · ···· n~y; ··

·- Pi~~~ --- - - -- -- - - -··· ···· i"~ ~-t ~-~~ t~-~

352b-3 History of Latin America .
001
9:00-10:15
Tu Th
GC 0411
Williman
367b-3 History of the Far East .
001
1:00-1:50
M W F
GC 04.03
Huang
3 72b- 4 History of Russia .
E001
6:20--8:10
Tu Th
GC 0411
Kimball
405-3 The American Civil War .. ...... ... ............... ..................................... ... .
001
11:00--11:50
M W F
GC 0403 Riddleberger
412b-3 Intellectual History of the United States.
001
12:00- 12:50 M WTh
GC 0403
Rosenthal
415a-4 Early Modern Europe ..................... ..... .............................. .... ........ .
001
10:00-10:50
MTu W F
GC 0403
Erickson
440b-3 History of American Diplomacy .
001
12:00--1: 15
Tu Th
GC 2303
Weiss
452-3 Historical R esearch and Thesis Writing . ... ................. .... ............. ... .
001
2 :00-3:15
Tu Th
GC 2303
Rosenthal
500-4 History Seminar .
E001
5:30-8:10
M
GC 0403 Riddleberger
Th
E002
5:30--8:10
GC 0403
Pearson
HUMANITIES

(HUM)

302-3 Humanities Honors .................. .. ......... .
001
Arranged
INSTRUCT I 0 N A L
308-4
E001
400- 2
E001
417-4
E001
002
003
4 70-4
E001
514-4
E001
546-4
001

Goedecke

MATER I A L S

J0

URN ALI S M

(JRNL)

103-3 News
11:00- 12:15
001
Tu Th
201-3 News Writing and Editing I .
001
2:00-2:50
M
2:00-3:50
w
202-3 News Writing a nd Editing II .
001
2:00--2:50
Tu
2:00-3:50
Th
370-4 Principles of Advertising (Same as Mktg
E001
6:20--8:10
Tu Th
MAN AGE MEN T
170-4

GC 04ll

R. Lee

GC 3303
GC 3303

R. Lee
R. Lee

GC 3303
GC 3303
333)
GC 3302

R. Lee
R. Lee
Eckles

(MGT)

Introduction to Business Administration .

001
002

9:00- 9:50
MTuWTh
1:00--1:50
MTu T hF
201
8:00-8:50
MTu ThF
202
10:00- 10:50
MTu ThF
E203
8:20-10:10
M W
r-:204
6:20- 8 :10
Tu Th
401
8:00-8 :50
MTu ThF
402
10:00--10:50
MTu ThF
E403
8:20- 10:10
M w
241 - 4 Principles of Programming for Electronic
001
2:00- 2 :SO
MTu ThF
E20J
5:30- 8:10
Tu
S
Arranged
271-4

(I M)

School Library Technical Processes ... ........................ ..................... .
6:20-8:10
Tu Th
GC 2307
staff
Library Research Methods .
6:20- 8: lO
M
LB 0042
staff
Audio-Visual Methods in Education .......... .................................... .
4:20- 6:10
M W
LB 0042
Mitchell
11:00-12:50
Tu Th
LB 0042
Madison
LB
0042
12:00- 1:50
M w
Madison
Programmed Instruction .
5:30--8:10
Th
LB 0042
Wagner
Survey of Research and Development in Instructional Materials ...
5:30- 8:10
Tu
LB 0042
Mitchell
Integration of Audio-Visual Materials in the Classroom .
9 :00- ll :50
S LB 0042
Madison

Business Writing .
201
12:00-12:50
E40!
6:20-8:10

MTuW

M

w

F

McKinney
GC 0312
Skjerseth
GC 2410
ANA 104
Cutright
ANA 104
Cutright
Thorson
SCI 002
McKinney
SCI 102
B. Miller
ESL 130
B. Miller
ESL 115
staff
ESL 205
Data Processing .
GC 3315
staff
ANA 101
P. Tarpey
Edwardsville
P. Tarpey
AUD 103
ESL 215

Brady
staff

�W INT E R

M ANAGE M ENT ( M GT)

25

Course No .- Ho urs D escript ive Titl e .
Ed w. Alton E. St. Louis
T ime

320- 5
001
£002
323-4
001
c002
327- 4
cOOl
328-3
001
E002

Corporation Finance .
1:00-1:50
MTuWThF
GC 0304
Meador
5:55- 8:10
Tu Th
GC 2410
Cutright
Investments ... ....... ..... ...... ... ..... ... .. .... ................... .. ....... ... ...... ...... .
12 :OG-12 :50
GC 0304
MTu ThF
R. Thomas
6:20- 8:10
Tu Th
GC 3316
R. Thomas
General Insurance .
6: 20- 8:10
M W
GC 3302
R. Thomas
Real Estate ... ........ ............ ........ .. ....... ....... ........ .
10:00- 10:50
M W F
GC 2307
Ruddy
5:30-8:10
Tu
GC 0403
Ruddy

340- 4

Business Organization a nd Management _

001
E002
361-3
001
£002
371-4
001
£002
3 72- 4
001
E002
380- 4
001
E002
385-4
001
c002

9:00-9:50
6: 20- 8:10
Business Report Writing .
8:00- 8:50
5:30-8:10
Business Law I .
ll :OG-ll :50
8:20-10:10
Business Law II .
8:00-8:50
6:20-8:10
Production Management .
10:00-10:50
6:20-8: 10
Personnel Management .
ll :00- ll :50
8:20-10:10

421-4

Management of Business Finance . ...... ... ....... .. .

E00l
442-4
cOOl
4 72-4
001
475-4
001
c002
4 79-4
001
481-4
001
c002
485- 4
001
595-4
E00l

6:20- 8:10
Tu Th
GC 2303
Management of Data Procossing Systems .
8:20- 10:10
Tu Th
GC 2403
Small Business .
12 :00- 12:50
MTu ThF
GC 2403
Budgeting and Systems.
10:00- 10:50 MTuWTh
GC 2403
8:20- 10:10
M W
GC 2403
Problems in Business and Economics .
ll :00-ll :50
MTu WTh
GC 2403
Administrative Management .
2:00- 3:50
M W
GC 0403
8:20- 10:10
Tu Th
GC 0413
Problems in Personnel Management .. ...
9:00-9:50
MTu ThF
GC 2309
Seminar in Personnel Management .
6: 20- 8:10
M w
GC 2309

596--4

Seminar in Production Management .

E00l

8:20- 10:10

MARKETING

MTuWTh
M w

GC 3302
GC 2412

Thorson

M

GC 2403
GC 2302

K. Martin
Houser

MTu WTh
M W

GC 2410
GC 2410

Heath
Heath

MTu ThF
M w

GC 2410
GC 2410

Ruddy
Heath

MTuWTh
Tu Th

GC 0412
GC 0412

In g wersen

MTuWTh
Tu Th

GC 0412
GC 0412

Scott
Scott

M

W F
Th

w

GC 2309

Thorson

Skjerseth

Meador
B. Miller

Skjerseth
Blackledge
Blackledge
Ingwersen

Glynn
staff
Meador
Blackledge
Ingwe rsen

(MKTG)

230-5 Principles of Marketing .
001
10:00- 10:50
MTuWThF
GC 3313
G. Wan g
201
9:00-9:50
MTuWThF
SCI 201
Vincent
202
ll :OG-ll :50
MTuWThF
ANB 102
Vincent
E203
5:55- 8:10
M W
ANB 102
Bosse
401
9:00-9:50
MTuWThF
ESL ll5
Gwin
402
ll :00- ll :50
MTuWThF
Gwin
ESL 103
E403
5 :55-8 :10
Tu Th
ESL 103
Debord
331-4 Retailing
cOOl
8:20- 10:10
Tu Th
GC 3302
G. Wang
333- 4 Principles of Advertising (Same as Jrnl 370 ) .... ...... . ...... ..
E00l
6:20- 8:10
Tu Th
GC 3302
Eckles
334-4 Credits and Collections ... ... .. ......................................... ..... ...... ... .
001
8:00- 8:50
MTuWTh
GC 3302
G. Wang
335- 4 International Marketing .
001
ll :00- ll :50
MTu ThF
GC 3302
Debord
337-4 Principles of Salesmanship ............................... ..... ...... ..
001
2:00- 2:50
MTu ThF
GC 3302
Bosse
338-4 Consumer Behavior .
001
9 :OG-9 :50
MTuWTh
GC 1414
Eckles
339-4 Industrial M a rketing .
E00l
8:20-10:10
M W
GC 1414
Gwin
341-4 Transportation
001
I :OG-1 :50
GC 1414
MTu ThF
Bosse

�26

MA RK ETI N G ( M K TG)

~d~v~sc A~t~-;-HE~ tS~ . L~~si~ri pti Ti~J~tle .

······ ··· n~y~- · ····· ·· ····· - ··· pj~~~ - --

438- 4 Sales Management .
&gt;:001
6:20-8:10
M w
463- 3 Advertising Mana gement .
001
10:00- 10:50 M WTh
490- 4 Marketing Researc h and Analysis .
001
12:00-12:50 MTuWTh
MATHEMATICS

GC 0413

Vincent

GC 0413

Eckles

GC 2309

Debord

(MATH )

100-0 Elementary Mathematics .
MTu ThF
001
12:00-12:50
GC 2306
Ewing
201
1:00-2 :50
MTuWThF
SCI 102
Marlin
MTuWThF
202
3:00- 4:50
SCI 102
staff
MTu ThF
ESL 106
401
12:00- 12 :50
staff
llla- 5 Elementary Analysis _
MTuWThF
GC 3316
I :00-1:50
English
001
MTuWThF
SCI 002
Goer in g
201
1:00- 1:50
MTuWThF
ESL 204
Nannini
1:00- 1:50
401
Ill b-5 Elementary Analysis
MTuWThF
201
10:00-10:50
SCI 201
Gwillirn
MTuWThF
202
11 :00-ll :50
SCI 201
Gwillim
MTuWThF
SCI
003
Marl in
203
12:00-12:50
MTuWThF
ESL 224
Be nn ewitz
401
9:00-9:50
150a- 4 Elementary Calculus and Analytic Geometry .
201
ll :00- ll :50
MTu ThF
ANA 101
Raimo
401
9:00-9:50
MTu ThF
ESL 106
Nannini
150b-4 Elementary Calculus and Analytic Geometry .
E201
5:55- 7:45
M W
SCI 103
Forcade
202
10:00--10:50
MTu ThF
SCI 103
Haimo
Rutledge
E401
6:20-8 :10
Tu Th
ESL 205A
Lind strum
402
10:00-10:50
MTu ThF
ESL 215
252a- 4 Calculus and Analytic Geometry ...
SCI 103
Marlin
201
8:00-8:50
MTu ThF
Phillips
202
1:00--1:50
MTu ThF
ANA 101
ESL
215
Verderber
401
9:00- 9 :50
MTu ThF
252b- 4 Calculus and Analytic Geometry .
Holden
201
11:00-11:50
TuWThF
SCI 003
300-4 The R ea l Number System .
Phillips
201
10:00- 10:50
MTu ThF
SS 106
305a- 3 Applied Mathematics for the Physical Sciences .
201
11:00-11:50
M W F
SS 106
staff
305b-3 Applied Mathematics for the Physical Sciences .
EOOI
3:20- 9:35
Tu Th
GC 2306
Ewing
310- 4 The Teaching of Elementary Mathematics .
001
10:00--10:50
MTu ThF
GC 2306
Fanning
002
11 :00-ll :50
MTu ThF
GC 2306
Fanning
320a-3 Fundamental Concepts of Algebra .
E001
6:20- 7:35
M W
GC 2306
PoynLlr
401
8:00- 8:50
M W F
ESL 204
Be nnewitz
320b-3 Fundamental Concepts of Al gebra .
201
1:00--1 :50
M W F
ss 106 P endergrass
42la-3 Linear Algebra .
001
4:20-5:35
M W
Srivastava
GC 2306
430- 4 Projective Geometry .
MTu
ThF
Nannini
401
2:00--2 :50
ESL 112
452b-3 Advanced Calculus
M w
E001
8:20--9:35
GC 2306
Poynor
ESL 220
401
1:00--1 :50
M w F
Lindstrum
4 75b- 3 Numerical Analysis .
-------- -------------·
E00 J
8:20-9:35
GC 0307
Goering
M w
480b-3 Probability
E001
6:20- 8:10
Clemans
M w
GC 3316
520a-4 Modern Algebra .
E001
6:20- 8:10
GC 1402
Oursler
M w
530-3 Point Set Topology .
E001
8:20-9:35
M w
GC 0304
Lindstrum
550d-3 Seminar: Probability and Statistics .
E40l
Arranged
Rutledge
555a-3 Complex Variables .
E001
3:20-9:35
M w
GC 2412
Srivasta\'a
An In-Service Institute in Mathematics for Secondary Teachers

GSD 112b- 3 Introduction to Mathematics
E002
6:20- 7::15
Tu Th
GC 2306
Holden
542-2 to 4 Elementary Functions from an Advanced Standpoint .
E001
6:20- 8:10
Tu Th
GC 0312 Pendergrass

�WI N TER

MUSIC

MUSIC ( Mus )

27

(MUS)

OO!a-1 Symphonic Band .
12:00-1:50
001
M w F
GC 3417 c. Fjerstad
201
M w F
11:00- 11:50
FAB 101
Mellott
401
8:00-8 :50
M w F
ESL 210
Oberlag
OO!b--0 Stage Band ............. .....
10:00-10:50
Tu Th
001
GC 3417
c. Fjerstad
OO!c-0 Instrumental Lab .
Tu
2 :00-2 :50
001
GC 3406
Oberlag
002a-l Collegiate Singers ........... ................ .. .... ... . ....... .. . . ................ .
201
2:00- 2:50
M W F
FAB 101
Joseph
002b--l University Chorus .
... .......... .. ............... .. ....................... .. . .
401
3:00- 3:50
Tu Th
ESL 212
C. R. Wagner
002c-l Male Chorus ................ .... .. .... ........ ........... .
001
2:00- 2:50
Tu Th
GC 3417
Van Camp
002d-1 Women's Glee Club .
001
3:00-3:50
Tu Th
GC 3417
Van Camp
002e-1 Community Choral Society .............. ................... .
E001
7:30-9:30
Tu
GC 1402
Van Camp
002f-l Madrigal Singers ..... .
001
11:00-11:50
Tu Th
GC 3305
Van Camp
002g-1 Concert Chorale (By Audition)
001
11:00- 11:50
M W F
GC 3417
Van Camp
003-1 University Symphony Orchestra .. ......................................
EOOI
8:00-10:00
Tu
GC 3417
Kendall
O!Oa-1 Class Applied Music-Strings .
001
9:00-10:15
Tu Th
GC 3406
Perry
201
9:00-10:15
Tu Th
FAB 101
Magers
401
I :00-1:50
Tu Th
ESL 210
Perry
O!Ob--1 Class Applied Music-Woodwinds ....................... .
201
8:00-8:50
M W F
FAB 101
Mellott
O!Oc-1 Class Applied Music-Brass
001
9:00-9:50
M w F
GC 3417
Fowler
O!Oe-1 Class Applied Music-Piano.
001 Ost year)
10:00-10:50
M w F
GC 3404
Henderson
002 (Advanced) 8 :00-8:50
M w F
GC 3404
Henderson
003
9:00-9:50
M w F
GC 3404
Henderson
201 Ost year) I :00-1:50
M w F
FAC 202
Henderson
401
(1st year) 3:00-4:15
M W
ESL 225
Henderson
402
(Advanced) 5 :00- 6:15
M W
ESL 225
Henderson
O!Of-1 Class Applied Music-Voice .... ................................ .. ................ .. .
001
12:00-12:50
M W F
GC 3406 Breidenthal
I 05a-4 Theory of Music ....................... .. ... ..... .
001
9:00- 9:50
MTuWThF
GC 3305
Warren
105b-4 Theory of Music .
8:00-8:50
001
MTuWThF
GC 3305
Perry
201
3:00-3:50
MTuWThF
FAC 203
Magers
401
2:00-2:50
MTuWThF
ESL 212
Pival
140a thru s-2 or 4 Private Applied Music ........... ... ... .
001, 201, 401
Arranged
staff
g. Clarinet
m. Trumpet
a. Violin
b. Viola
h. Bassoon
n. Trombone
c. Cello
i. Saxophone
o. Tuba
d. String Bass
j. Percussion
p. Baritone
e. Flute
k. Piano
q. Voice
f. Oboe
I. French Horn
r. Organ
s. Harpsichord
141-0 Recital Class ... ..................... .. ... .. .......... .
001
I :00-1:50
Th
GC 3305
Joseph
201
1:00-1:50
Th
FAB 101
Henderson
205b--3 Theory of Music
....................................................................... .
001
10:00-10:50 MTu WTh
GC 3305
Warren
240a thru s-2 or 4 Private Applied Music (See Mus 140 above)
001 , 201, 401
Arranged
staff
300-3 Music Education-Elementary
001
4:30-5:30
Tu Th
GC 3305
Tulloss
Tulloss
One hour lab arranged
301 b--3 Music Education ....
Joseph
001
10:00-10:50
M W F
GC 1410
307-4 Recreational Music ...... .
001
5:30-7:10
Tu Th
GC 3305
Tulloss

�28

MUS IC ( MUS )

Course No.- Hours D ~s cript i vc Title
Edw. Alton E. St . Louis
T ime

309b-3
001

Orchestration
-------- -- ---··· ···
2:00-2 :50
Tu
GC 3305
Oberlag
Th
2:00- 3 ;50
GC 3305
Oberlag
318b- 3 Conducting
9:00- 9:50
F
GC 3406
001
M
Joseph
340a thru s-2 or 4 Private Applied Music (See Mus 140 above)
001
Arran ged
staff
355a-1 Chamber Music Ensembles- Brass ---- ------------------- -- --001
ll :00- ll :50
Tu Th
GC 3417 C. Fjerstad
355b-1 Chamber Music Ensembles-Woodwind ____ --------- -- -------001
ll :00- ll :50
Tu Th
GC 3421
Mellott
002
ll :00- ll :50
Tu Th
GC 3414
Oberlag
003
3 :00-3:50
Tu Th
GC 3421
Mellott
355c-1 Chamber Music Ensembles-String ------ -------------- ----- ----- -------- --001
ll :00- ll :50
Tu Th
GC 3406
Pival
440a thru s- 2 or 4 Private Applied Music (See Mus 140 above)
001
Arranged
staff
461 b-3 Teaching Techniques and Materials: Advanced Students _
E001
Arranged
Slenczynska
465-3 Development and Teaching of Strings _
E001
5:30-8:10
Tu
GC 3417
Kendall
481-2 to 6 Readings in Music Theory _
001
Arranged
staff
482-2 to 6 Readings in Music History and Literature
001
Arranged
staff
483-2 to 6 Readings in Music Education -- ------ --- ------ ---- --- ---- ----·-001
Arranged
Joseph
502a-3 History and Analysis of Musical Style ------- -----------· ----- ---- --------·
001
5:30- 8 :10
M
GC 3305
Warren
535-3 Contemporary Idioms _
001
5:30-8:10
W
GC 3305
Kresteff
540a thru s-2 to4 Private Applied Music (See Mus 140 above)
001
Arranged
staff
550b- 4 Organization and Administration of the Music Education
Program-Secondary ...................... ........ .. ........................ ... .
001
4:30- 7:00
Th
GC 3406
Blakely
556-3 Advanced Conducting (Choral) --- ------ ---- ------------ --------- ---------001
5 :30- 8:10
M
GC 3417
Van Camp
566-1 Instrumental Ensemble
001
Arranged
staff
567-1 Vocal Ensemble
001
Arranged
staff
599-3 to 6 Thesis ----- --- ----- ----------------- ·····
001
Arranged
staff

w

NURSING

(NURS)

101b-1

Orientation to Nursing
401
9:00-9:50
M
210-2 Normal Nutrition ..
4:20-6:10
001
M w
302-8 Pediatric Nursing _
7 :00- ll :50
401
M w F
8:00- 9:50
Tu Th
325- 8 Psychiatric Nursing .
7:30-12:20
401
M w F
8 :30-10 :30
Tu Th
Backgrounds
and
Trends
in
Nursing
_
355-4
4:20-6:10
Tu Th
401
363c-8 Medical-Surgical Nursing III _

ESL 220

Shay

GC 1412 Lutz, Rowena
Hospital
ESL 220

Lipchak
Lipchak

Hospital
ESL 204

Jenkins

ESL 220

staff

To be taken concurrently wi th 382-6.

8 :00-10:20
ThF
Zich
Lect
ESL 221
MTuW
Hosp ital
Zich
Lab 401 *7:30-3:30
375-8 Public Health Nursing ------------- ------- -- ---------------- ----- ------------ --------- ···-401
8:30- 12:30
MTuWThF
Agency
Burton
382-6 Development of Leadership in Nursing _
To be taken concurrently with 363c- 8.
Lect
10 :30-ll :50
ThF
ESL 220
Zich
Lab 401 ** 7 :30-3:30 MTuW
Hospital
Zich
PH I L 0 S 0 PH Y

(PHIL)

200-4 Types of Philosophy _
001
10:00-10:50
E401
8:20- 10:10

* First

half quarter.

* * Second half quarter.

MTuWTh
Tu Th

GC 0406
ESL 105

Perkins
Marti

�W I N TER

240-4
300-4
001
302-4
.:001
324-4
001
342-4
001
381b-4
001
443-4
001
484c- 4
001

PHILOSO P HY ( PHI L )

29

Ethics
201
2 :00-2:50
MTu ThF
ANA 101
Glossop
Elementary Metaphysics
1:00- 1:50
MTu ThF
GC 0412
Martland
World Religions ---------6 :20-8 :10
M W
GC 3315
Martland
Symbolic Logic
12 :00- 12 :50
MTu ThF
GC 3315
Li ve rgood
Social and Political Theory
II :00-11:50 MTuWTh
GC 0413
Goedecke
History of Western Philosophy
!0:00- 11:50
Tu Th
GC 0304
Rodier
Philosophy of History --- --- --------------- -- -- -- ------ ---- -------- --- --- --- ---Arra nged
Perkins
History of Western Political Theory ----- ------------------- --1:00-2 :50
M W
Runkle
GC 0413

PHYSICAL

EDUCATION

(PE)

341-3

Principles of Physical Education .
201
8 :00- 8:50
M W F
AUD 102
Klein
350- 4 Methods and Materials for Teaching Physical Education in
the Elementary School -- ---- -------- -- ---- --- --- ------- ---- -- ------ -- --- -001
3 :00-3:50
MTuWTh
GC 0312
Moehn
401
10:00-10:50 MTu WTh
ESL 221 &amp; ESL 009
Moehn
E402
6:20-8:10
M W
ESL 106 &amp; ESL 009
Archangel
354-3 Organization and Administration of Physical Education and
Athletics
------ ----- ------- --- --- -- ------201
9:00- 9 :50
M W F
SS 106
Leudke
PHYSICAL

ED U CAT I

0 N-M EN

(PEM )

Physical Education Skill Courses for Men: Basic Rhythms I _
201
1:00- 2:40
F
GYM 102
S. Carpenter
IOOd-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Men: Beginning
Gymnastics
201
II :00- 11:50 M W
GYM 102
Leudke
!OOj-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Men: Indoor Net Games
(Badminton &amp; Volleyball )
201
II :00- 11:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
Brick
IOOa-1

PHYSICAL
100a-1

ED U CAT I 0 N-W 0 MEN

(PEW)

Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Basic Rhythms .
201
I :00-2 :40
F
GYM 102
S. Carpenter
IOOg-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Basketball
201
2:00- 2 :50
Tu Th
GYM 102
Marks
401
3 :00-3:50
M W
ESL 009
Marks
100h-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Intermediate
Modern Dance -------------- --------·· ------ -- --- ------ ----- --- ·- ··-201
9 :00- 9:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
S. Carpenter
401
12 :00-12:50
Tu Th
ESL 009 S. Carpenter
!OOj-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Volleyball .
201
9 :00- 9:50
M W
GYM 102
Marks
E401
6:20-8:10
Tu
ESL 009
Marks
lOOk-! Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Stunts and
Tumbling ...
-------- ----- ------ --- -- -·-· ··· ··
201
12:00- 12:50
Tu Th
GYM 102
Archangel
1001- 1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Women : Physical
Conditioning --- ---- ---------- --- --- .. ..
201
2:00- 2:50
M W
GYM 102
Archan gel
401
ll :00-11:50
M W
ESL 009
Marks
lOOn-! Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Badminton .
£201
6: 20- 8:10
Th
GYM 102
Marks
100q-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Life Saving _
Pool rental fee $6, pa.yahl e first class meeting.
&gt;:~01
7:00-9:00
Th
GYM 102 Archangel
IOOs-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Apparatus
Activities ...... ............ ... ....... .
. ... ......... ....... ......... .
201
1:00-1:50
M W
GYM 102 Archangel
lOOw-1 Physical Education Skill Courses for Women: Fencing .
401
12:00-12:50 M W
ESL 009
Marks

�30

PHYSICAL EDUCATION-

WOMEN ( PEW )

~d~v~c A~t~·;-;-HE~us~. ~~~i~ri ptiTi!~tle ·················o~:;~ ·-·
321- 2

Methods of Teaching in Physical Education for Women _
201
8:00- 8:50
M W F
GYM 102
1 hour arrange d
S. Carpenter
323-1 Officiatin g Techniques .
201
2: 00-2 :50
Tu Th
GYM 102 Archangel

P H YS I CS

(PHYS )

211b-5

University Physics _
Lect
9:00- 9:50
M W F
8 :00-9 :50
Tu
Th
Lab 201
10:00-n :50
Th
Lab 202
8 :00-9:50
MTuW F
Lect
9:00-9:50
Th
Lab 401 8 :00-9 :50
211c-5 U niversity Physics _
Tu Th
Lect E
5 :55-8:10
Tu
Lab E201
8 :20- 10: 10
300-5 University Physics IV _
M w F
201
1:00-1:50
Th
12: 00-1:50
Tu
12:00-1 :50
301 b-4 Mechanics
201
2:00-2:50
MTuW F
401
2 :00-2:50
MTuW F
305b-4 Introduction to Electric Theory ... _
E40l
6:20-8:10
Tu Th
310-4 Light
E201
6:20-8 :10
M w
311-1 Optics Laboratory _
201

SCI 003
SCI 003
SCI 007
SCI 007
ESL 124A
ESL 124
SCI 003
SCI 007

Sanders
Sanders

SCI 003
SCI 103
SCI 007

Boedecker
Boedecker
Boedecker

SCI 003
ESL 124A

Jones
Walford

ESL 124A

Bro wn

SCI 002

375-0 to 2 Seminar
201
Arranged
415b-4 Modern Physics _
_____ ---------- ------------------ --·-"·"
201
9 :00-9:50
MTu ThF
ANA 108
418-1 to 4 Modern Physics Laboratory .. .....
201
To be ar ra nged
445a-4 X-Ray C rystallography _
401
3:00-3:50
MTuW F
ESL 124A
510b-3 Classical Mechanics __ _
6:20-7:35
E001
GC 0307
M w
53 1b-3 Quantum M echanics .
8 :20-9:35
GC 3302
E00l
M w

PH Y S I 0 L 0 G Y

staff
Sande rs
Sanders
Walford
Boedeker
Hakeem

(PHSL )

Principles of Physiology _
Lect
3:00-3:50
Lab 201
3 :00-4 :50
3 :00- 4:50
Lab 202
3 :00-3:50
Lect
Lab 401 3 :00- 4:50
Lab 402 3:00-4 :50
430b-4 Cellular Physiology
Lect
11:00-11:50
3 :00-4:50
Lab 201

PSYCHOLOGY

staff
staff

Arranged

209-4

So kolowski
So kolowski
So kolowski
So kolowski
Slotboom
Slotboom

M w F
Tu
Th
M w F
Tu
Th .

SCI 002
SCI no
SCI 110
ESL n2
ESL n6
ESL n6

R. Parker
R. Parker
staff
Ratzlaff
Ratzlaff
Ratzlaff

w
w

SCI 102
SCI no

Wooldridge

M

F

Wooldridge

(PSYC )

Principles and Methods of P sychology I _
·· ················
201
11:00- 12 :50
Tu Th
SCI 002
McCall
211 b-4 Principles and Methods of Psychology II _
GC 2307
Eddowes
001
12 :00-1 :50
M W
301-4 Chi ld P sychology _
001
4:20-6 :10
M W
staff
GC 3316
c002
8:20-10 :10
Tu Th
staff
GC 33 15
003
l :00-2 :50
Tu Th
Stein brook
GC 3313
303-4 Adolescent Psychology _
001
4:20- 6:10
Tu T h
GC 3316
Davi•
305-4 Persona lity Dynamics _
___ ____ ___ ---- --.- ............ .
£001
6 :20-8:10
T u Th
GC 3315
sta ff
002
12: 00-1 :50
Tu Th
GC 2304
Soper
307-4 Social Psychology
......... "------- ------------------·----·
E001
6:20-8 :10
Tu Th
GC 2412
McMahon
311-4 Experimental Psychology: Learning _
001
2 :00-3:50
M W
GC 2303
Ferguson
211a-4

Laboratory arra nge d

�WI N TER

PSYCHOLOGY ( PSYC )

31

Course No .- Hours Descriptive Title
Edw . Alton E . St. Louis
Time

312-4
001

320-4
001

407-4
£001

408-4
001

421-4
E001

432-4
001

451 - 4
001

4 79-4
E001

Experimental Psychology: Perception
2:00- 3 :50
Tu Th
GC 0304
Eddowes
Laboratory arranged
Industrial Psychology .
11:00--12:50
Tu Th
GC 2405
staff
Theories of Learning (Meets with Guid 511)
5:30- 8:10
M
F* GC 0314
McMahon
Theories of Motivation .... ..... ... .. .................. .... .
9:00-9:50
MTuWTh
GC 2302
Ferguson
Psychological Tests and Measurements .
12:00-1:50
M W
GC 2303
Harris
Mental Hygiene .
. ...... ......... ..... .. ............. .... ..... .
9:00--10:50
M W
GC 2409
staff
Advanced Child Psychology .
10:00--10:50
MTuWTh
LB 0042
Rochester
Psychology of Industrial Conflict .
5:30- 8:10
F* GC 2307
Daugherty
Daugherty
5:30- 8:10
Th
GC 0303

R AD I 0- TEL E VIS I 0 N
Basic Television Production .
Tu
201
8:00- 10:50

274-5

S0 C I 0 L0 G Y
301-4
302-4
312-4
001

338-4
001

340-4
001

3 74-4
001

375-4
001

405-4
001

481-4
001

482-4
001

001

104-4
001

202-3
001

209-1
309-1
001

406-4
001

Th

TV 104

Hawkins

(SOC)

Introductory Sociology ......... ............ ............. ...... .. .... ........... ............
Collins
201
8:00-8:50
MTuWTh
SCI 102
Contemporary Social Problems .
Collins
201
10:00--10:50
MTuWTh
HUM 107
401
1:00--1:50
Tu WThF
ESL 104
Teer
Sociological Research
GC 2307
J. Schusky
2:00--3:50
M W
Industrial Sociology .
More
12:00- 12:50 MTuWTh
GC 3316
The Family .................. ... ......... .. ................. .
Taylor
9:00-9:50
MTuWTh
GC 0304
Sociology of Education .
8:00- 8:50
MTu ThF
GC 3316
D. More
Social Work as a Social Institution .
9:00--9:50
Tu WThF
GC 2405
Teer
Teer
401
6:20- 8:10
Tu Th
ESL 224
Current Sociology .
Remmling
3:00--3 :50
MTuWTh
GC 3316
Processes in Social Work .
Irvine
1:00- 2:50
M W
GC 2309
Social Work in Selected Agencies .
Arranged
Irvine

SPEECH
102-4

(R-T)

(SPCH)

Public Speaking .
ll :00-ll :50
M WThF
GC 2303
Training the Speaking Voice .
9:00- 9:50
MTu ThF
GC 2307
Principles of Discussion .................................. .. .... .. .. .
1:00-1:50
Tu
GC 0413
1:00-2:50
Th
GC 0413
Forensic Activities .
201
3:00-4:30
ANB 103
w
Forensic Activities ·········· ······ ···· -- -- -------------------- --·-3 :00--4:30
Th
GC 1410
Teaching Speech in Secondary Schools ................ .... .. ..
GC 2307
10:00- ll :50
Tu Th

SPEECH C 0 R RECTI 0 N
100-0

Robinson
St. Onge

Robinson

Robinson
Robinson

H. White

(SP C)

Speech Clinic .
Carey
001
Arranged
203-4 Introduction to Speech Science .
St. Onge
001
10:00--10:50
MTu ThF
GC 2309
428-4 Speech Correction for the Classroom Teacher (Same as
SpE 428)
Carey
ThF* GC 2309
E001
5:30--8:10

* First

four Fridays only.

�'I
32

THEATER

( THEA)

~d~~sc ftt~;-HE~uS~. fo~si~ri ptiTin~~tle ............. 0 ~-y~·-·

THE ATE R

···· pi~~~ ·· ··· · · ············ f~~-t;~~t~-~

( THEA )

111b--3

Staging Techniques ....
401
3 :00-3 :50
M W F
(Altern ate Fridays arranged)
208- 1 Drama tic Activities
..................... .
401
4:00-4 :50
MTu WThF
D
ra
matic
Activities
308-1
401
4 :00-4 :50
MTuWThF
311-4 Introduction to P laywriting
001
2:00-3 :50
Tu Th
ZOOLOGY

ESL 130 Van Der Poll
ESL 130

Pritner

ESL 130

Pritner

GC 2309

Birdman

( ZOOL )

General Invertebrate Zoology ..
--------------·····
9 :00-9:50
SCI 102
Lect
M w F
Wooldridge
SCI llO
8:00-9:50
Lab 201
Tu T h
Wooldridge
10:00-ll :50
Tu Th
SCI llO
Lab 202
Wooldridge
Lect
1:00-1:50
M w F
ESL ll 2
Thomerson
ESL 116
Lab 401 12:00-1:50
Tu Th
Thomerson
Vertebrate
Embryology
.
300-5
10:00- 10:50
Tu Th
SCI 200
N. Parker
Lect
Lab 201
8:00-9:50
M w F
SCI 110
N. Parker
10:00- ll :50
M w F
Lab 202
SCI 110
N. Parker
313-3 Evolution
201
9:00-9:50
M w F
ANB 201 Broadbooks,
H.
314- 4 H eredity and Eugenics ............. ...... .......... .. .... .
201
8:00-8:50
MTu ThF
SCI 002
Frost
382b--Y• Zoology Seminar fo r Seniors
201
4:00-4:50
Tu
SCI 103
Axtell
480-3 Zoogeography .. ... ..... ... ........ ............................................ ..... ......... .
12:00-12 :50
M W F
SCI 110
Axtell
201
509b--2 Topics in Biology ........... ... .... .. .
201
6:00-7:20
M W
55 106
Frost
520-5 Advanced Invertebrate Zoology .
SCI 201
Myer
5:55-6:45
Tu Th
Lect E
Lab 201
6:55- 9:45
Tu Th
SCI 110
Myer
102-5

VOCATIONAL - TECHNICAL
INSTITU T E (VTI)
Data Processing M ath ematics
---------- --- ---- ·
E401
5:55-8 :10
Tu Th
ESL 106
staff
H120a-4 Stenograph Machines I .
6:20-8:10
Tu Th
ANA 111
staff
£201
S 107- 2 Filing and Duplicating -- ----- --- --- ------ -· -·
8 :20-10:10
Th
ANA 111
staff
E201
Noncredit Cou rses--Tech nical and Adult Education
Studen ts enrollin g in these courses must make separate arrangements
with the student Affairs Division at each campus on the dates announced
by th at office. Enrollment in these courses is not a rra nged throu gh the
Registrar's Office.
E nglish R eview .
8:20-10:10
GC 0413
staff
E001
6:20-8:10
staff
.:201
M
ANB 103
staff
8:20- 10: 10
£401
F
ESL 103
Reading Imp rovement .
staff
E001
8:20-10:10
Th
GC 0406
staff
£201
4:00-6 :10
Tu
ANA 104
staff
F.401
6 :20- 8:10
F
ESL 104

E!00- 5

w

��Southern lflinois-Un_iversity Bulletin
Edwardsville, Illinois 62025
Return Requested

-

Second Class Postage Paid at
Carbondale, Illinois

----

-------

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                    <text>�This Bulletin
Contains the schedule of classes to be offered by the Edwardsville Campus for the summer quarter of 1966 at
Edwardsville and East St. Louis. No classes will be held at
the Alton Center. It also provides information relative to
admission, advisement, registration, and fees. This schedule
supersedes Volume 7, No. 1.

�Schedule of Classes
Edwardsville Campus
Summer Quarter, 1966

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
Volume 8
Number 1
January, 1966
Second-class postage paid at Carbondale, Illinois. Published by Southern Illinois University, monthly except
December.

�University Calendar
Summ er Quarter, 1966
Quarter Begins
Independence Day H oliday
Final Examinations
Commencement (Carbondale )
Commencement (Edwardsville )

Monday, June 20
Monday, July 4
Aug. 29-Sept. 2
Friday, September 2
Saturday, September 3

Fall Quarter, 1966
New Student Week
Sunday-Tuesday, September 18- 20
Quarter Begins
Wednesday, September 21
Thanksgiving Vacation
W ednesday-Monday,
8 A.M., November 23-28
Quarter Ends
Saturday, D ecember 17

Registration Calendar
Summer Quarter, 1966
DATE

TIME

M ay 2-6

A c TIVITY

8:00 AM-5: 00 PM Pick up appointment
card at any center for
R egistration. Bring No.
3 card (Fee Receipt).

ALL REGISTRATION WILL BE AT EDWARDSVILLE CEN TER.
FEES WILL BE PAID AT TIME OF REGISTRATION.

M ay 14

M ay 16-20
May 21

June 20

June 27
July 4
July 5

July 18

August 15

Aug. 29Sept. 3
September 2

10:00 AM-2:00PM R egistration. No appointment card necessary.
10 :00 AM- 8:00PM R egistration by appointment card.
10: 00 AM- 2: 00 PM R egistration. No appointment card necessary.
8:00 AM-7: 00 PM R egistration. No appointment card necessary.
5: 00 PM or later. Classes begin.
Last day to add classes.
Independence Day
Holiday.
8: 00 AM-5: 00 PM Last day to withdraw
from school to be eligible for a refund of fees.
8:00 AM- 5: 00 PM Last day to withdraw
from Summer Quarter
courses without receiving a letter grade.
8: 00 AM-5: 00 PM Last day for withdrawal from school
except under exceptional conditions.
As schedul ed
Final Examinations
Quarter ends.
II

�General
Information

1

The Edwardsville Campus of Southern Illinois University
has scheduled a summer quarter, June 20 to September 3.
Courses designed specifically to meet the needs of teachers
are scheduled for shorter periods with the majority
planned to meet for 8 weeks.
The Edwardsville Campus offers courses leading toward associate, bachelor's, and master's degrees in selected
fields.
A variety of course offerings have been scheduled to
meet the specific needs of ( 1 ) teachers in service, ( 2)
freshmen-b eginning and refresher courses, ( 3) upperclassmen-basic requirements, ( 4) graduate students, and
( 5 ) liberal arts graduates and individuals on temporary
certificates desiring teacher certification.
For additional information, write to the Admissions
Office, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville, Illinois
62025.

ADMISSION
Application for admission to the summer session should
be initiated with the Admissions Office on or before June
1 to permit all necessary processing work to be completed
by the start of the session. A general admission requirement is the filing of a transcript of record covering all
previous high school and college work. Transcripts should
be mailed to the Admissions Office from the institution ( s)
attended and should reach the Admissions Office prior
to June 8, 1966.
An undergraduate student attending another institution who expects to graduate therefrom and who desires
to attend Southern during the summer only will be admitted as an unclassified student on the basis of a letter
of good standing from the registrar of the institution the
student is attending. The letter of good standing should be
sent directly to the Admissions Office in Edwardsville and
must be received prior to registration. The unclassified
student's application should be submitted to the Admissions Office by June 1, 1966. A high school senior who
ranks in the lowest third (lower 60 percentiles for out-ofstate students) of his graduating class who is permitted
to enter (on scholastic probation) for the summer quarter
must register for more than 8 hours in order to continue
in attendance during the fall quarter and must earn a C
average or above during the summer quarter.

�A student attending the Carbondale Campus spring
quarter who plans to a ttend th e Edwa rdsville Ca mpus
during the 1966 summer session must initiate his registration process by contacting the Admissions Office at Edwardsville.

SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER
Each student seeking admission to the University will
need to present a social security number for identification purposes. Any local social security offi ce can provide assistance in obtaining a number or repl acing a lost
card. At Alton the social security office is in the Germania Savings Building, 543 East Broadway; a t East St.
Louis the office is at 435 Missouri Avenu e; at Edwardsville
the Illinois State Employment offic e, 111 W est Vandalia,
provides social security information.

REQUIRED

TESTS

Each student entering Southern Illinois University directly
from high school is required to furnish to th e University
scores on the test batte ry administered by th e American
College T esting Program (A.c.T.) . These tests are given at
regional test centers throughout the U nited States in
March, April, and June. Information and application
blanks are normally available through the high school
guidance direc tor or principal, or may be obtained by
writing directly to : American College Testing Program,
Box 168, Iowa C ity, Iowa.
A student who finds it impossible to tak e the A.C.T.
tests may have scores from the College Entrance Examination Board ( c.E.E.B) submitted. The specific scores, which
must be submitted if the c.E.E.B. tests are submitted, are
Scholastic Aptitude T est, English Composition Test, and
Mathema tics ( Intermedia te ) T est. In order to have identical test data, a student who submits c .E .E.B. test data
will be required to submit scores from the A.C .T . no later
than one month after registra tion.
Transfer students are required to furnish A.C.T. scores
to the Student Counseling and Testing C ent er. (A transcript of these scores is available by sending one dollar
and a written request to the American College T esting
Program in I owa City.) If th e scores are on file at the
student 's form er school, a request should be made for
their forwarding. Test scores are not normally sent with a
person's transcript of grades and must be r equested separately fr om the appropriate office at the form er school.
If the A.C.T. tests have not been taken, arrangements to
do so should be made.

REGISTRATION
Registration for all students currently enrolled or who
have been accepted for admission will take place at the
Enrollment C ent er of th e Edwardsville Campus. All General Studies students must m ake up their schedule with
approval of G eneral Studies Advisement Office.

ACADEMIC

LOAD

The normal student load for the summer quarter is
2

�16 hours. Except by permission of the chief academic
adviser of th e center or by the h ead of his division, no
student may enroll for more than 18 hours of credit
per quarter. A student is considered a full-time student
during the summer quarter if he carries 12 or more
hours.

FEES
An Illinois undergraduate student taking more than 8
hours pay~ ~he following fe es each quarter.
TUitiOn ........... ...... .... ...... ... ................... . $42.00
Student Activity F ee ........................ 10.50
University Center Fee ....................... .
5.00
Book Rental Fee ................................
8.00
Student Welfare and
Recreation Fund ............................ 15.00
$80.50
An out-of-state student pays an additional $80.00
tuition.
A graduate student does not pay the Book Rental
Fee, because he buys his books.
A student taking 8 hours or fewer pays half tuition and book rental fee , full university center fee, and
has an option on paying the student activity fee. Once
an option has been made at the time of registration as
to whether or not to pay the activity fee, such option is
irrevocable.
Other special fees or deposits will be assessed when
applicable.
Students attending under state teacher-education,
military, or general-assembly scholarships are required
to pay the university center fee and the book rental fee.
Veterans attending under Public Laws 16 and 894 are
not required to pay any of the regular fees.

PROGRAM

CHANGES

Mere attendance does not constitute registration in a
class, nor will attendance in a class for which a student
is not registered be a basis for asking that a program
change be approved permitting registration in that class.
A student is officially registered only for those courses
appearing on his registration cards. Any change therefrom can be made only after fees are paid and must be
made throu gh an official program change. A student is
considered officially registered after he has cleared his
payment of fees at the Bursar's Office.
A program change must be made in order to drop or
add a course. A student may not drop a course merely
by sto pping attendance. If a student desires to drop a
course during the second, third, or four th week of a
qua rter, the change will be approved only when the reasons appear valid. If a student desires to drop a course
after the fourth week, the change will be approved only
under unusual conditions. In the last three weeks changes
will be approved only in extreme emergencies.
A General Studies student desiring to make a program
change must secure a pproval of th e General Studies Ad-

3

�visement Office. He, and any other student desiring to
make a program change, will then go to the Enrollment
Center. (Starting the second week of the quarter an evening student at East St. Louis may initiate his request to
drop a course by going to the G erreral Office in East St.
Louis. ) He is required to present his fe e receipt program
card and must complete the following procedure. After
having been cleared with the Enrollment C enter, program
changes for which a program change fee is assessed must
be presented to the Business Office for payment. The student immediately returns the progra m change to the Enrollment Center in the Registrar's Office for final processing. A student has not completed his program change
until he presents it to the Enrollment Center. No change
is official until the preceding procedure is completed.
Program changes involving the adding of a course
may be made May 23- June 27 at Edwardsville Enrollment
Center during normal office hours. ( No program changes
will be made June 20. ~

WITHDRAWAL

FROM

SCHOOL

A student who finds it necessary to withdraw from school
while the quarter is in progress must report to the Student
Affairs Office to initiate official withdrawal action.
No withdrawal will be permitted during the last
two weeks of a quarter except under exceptional conditions. A refunding of fees is permitted only if a withdrawal is officially completed within the first two weeks
of a quarter and if the application for a refund is received in the Registrar's Office by July 1, 1966. See the
registration calendar for specific dates concerning withdrawal and refunding of fees.

STUDENT

RESPONSIBILITY

Each student must assume responsibility for his progress
by keeping an up-to -date record of the courses he has
taken and by checking periodically with his adviser and
the Registrar's Office. Responsibility for errors in program or in interpretation of regulations of the University rests entirely with the student.

GRADUATION
Each student planning to graduate at the summer commencement must apply for graduation at the time of
registration for summer classes. All applications for
graduation must be received by June 21, 1966, by the
Office of the Registrar.

STUDENT

EMPLOYMENT

Students interested in part-time employment on campus
during the summer should make early application to the
office of Student Employment, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville, Illinois.

4

�Workshops and
Special Programs

2

National Science Foundation Mathematics Institute,
June 13-August 6. Registration will be held on the first
day of class, June 13. This eight-week institute for high
school teachers has been planned specifically to meet the
subject matter needs of teachers who have been out of
college for a number of years. Each teacher may take
courses giving 10 hours of credit in mathematics that
count toward a Master of Science in Education degree.
In addition to the regular activities of the institute, a series of lectures is planned to bring noted speakers
from both Europe and the United States before the
teachers in attendance.
Anyone interested in taking courses in the institute
should contact Professor R. N . Pendergrass, Director.
Art Workshop for Boys and Girls Ages 7 to 9 Years.
The class will offer an opportunity for exploration and experimentation in a variety of materials. The motivation
will be varied and in keeping with individual needs as well
as group activity. When possible, the class will be divided
into small groups by ages and compatibility of interest.
The emphasis will be on the development in the individual of his creative power through art activity.
The class will be observed by members in the adult
class of Art Education 300a. The workshop will meet from
two o'clock until four o'clock on Tuesday and Thursday
afternoons in SL 0209 on the Edwardsville campus. Meets
June 14 to August 4, 1966. No academic credit will be
granted.
Education Administration (EDAD) 434-4, ADMINISTRATOR'S WORKSHOP, August 16- August 26, 8:30
A.M. to 4:00P.M .
This workshop for school administrators will be oriented toward current problems in education. Special attention will be given to the acquisition, distribution, and
use of federal funds and state appropriations as well as
how to evaluate and report the results of projects. Specific
problems of each school district represented in the workshop will also receive attention.
The Workshop will be under the direction of Professors Robert Andree and George T. Wilkins of the Education Division. Special lecturers and consultants will be
available from Southern Illinois University, state and federal agencies, and public school personnel.

5

�Education Administration (EDAD ) 490-4, WORK.
SHOP IN COMPARATIVE EDUCATION, Jun e 9- June
30
A first-hand study of the educational programs and
practices of Great Britain, the Netherlands, Denmark
Sweden, Norway, and West Germany. National educator~
in these countries will be available for lectures and school
visitations. This traveling educational workshop is open
to advanced undergraduate and graduate students. AU
participants will engage in close study of the curricula and
the significant educational practices of each country visited. Graduate students will pursue an independent study
in an area of interest which may reflect directly to their
professional responsibilities or be useful to the edu cational
program in their school or school district.
For twenty-two days the students will participate in
the educational and cultural activities of six European
countries. Travel will be by air, steamer, bus, and rail.
This will be an opportunity to view the schools and experience the life of the people in these modern Northern
European countries.
For further information, students should contact Professor Henry T. Boss, Education Division, at Edwardsville.

Education Secondary (ED S ) 591--4, WORKSHOP
IN CURRENT PROBLEMS IN SECONDARY EDUCATION, August 16-August 26, 8:30A.M. to 4:00P.M.
An intensive workshop designed primarily to assist
professional educators in making a critical re-examination
of secondary education. Specialists will be on hand as lecturers and consultants to assist participants in this endeavor. Special attention will be given to significant problems of the school systems represented in the workshop.
It is anticipated that workshop participants will probe
into the effects of rec ent federal assistance programs on
the secondary school curriculum, problems of individualizing instruction in the face of an expanding curriculum,
the challenges of the new media and new teaching techniques, values of courses of study, and a review of the
philosophy und ergirding secondary education in America.
The total effort of the workshop will represent a critical
r e-examination of secondary education.
Dr. H enry T. Boss of the Education Division, Edwardsville Campus, will conduct this workshop.

SPECIAL

SUMMER

PROGRAMS

Symposium, The Visual Arts and Our En vironmentA three-day convocation, June 27, 28, 29, 1966.
Morning sessions will be devoted to Art and The Social Sciences, Art Inescapable-Our Environment, and
Art in a Pigeon Hole-Broken Communica tions. After
noon sessions will include panel discussion and a field trip.
An exploration of art as a factor in contemporary society
including art history as a functional tool for understanding social phenomena and art apprecia tion as a key to
improving the environment and understanding the creative
curriculum of our time.

6

�Schedule of
Classes

3

The University reserves the right to cancel, combine,
di vide , or limit enrollment in any class or classes; to
change the date, tim e, or place of meeting; to make any
other revisions in these course offerings which may beco m e
desira ble or necessary; and to do so without notice and
witho ut incurring obligation.

EXPLANATION OF THE
SCHEDULE
Courses are listed numerically within each subject-matter
area. The entry for each course is arranged as follows:
Bold-Face Line : The course's identification numb er is
foll owed by the numb er of quarter hours of credit and
the descriptive title. Special registration information or
other remarks about the course may appear on a second
bold-face line.
Light-Face Lines : The first column lists the section numbers (first digit always 0) for classes offered at Edwardsville; th e second lists sections (first digit always 4) offered
at East St. Louis. Following each section number are the
tim e th e class begins (between 7:00A.M. and 4:20 P.M.
for daytime classes ) and the time it ends. The section
numb er of each evening class has th e letter E prefixed.
The days when the class meets, th e place where it meets,
and the instructo r's last name complete the entry.
The course numbering system is as follows:
000-099 Courses not properly falling in the following
categories
100- 199 For fr eshmen
200- 299 For sophomores
300- 399 For juniors an d seniors
400-499 For seniors and graduate students
500- 600 For graduate studen ts only
Students registering for courses listed as "Arranged"
should consult the instructor indicated, or the head of the
division if no instructor is listed, to determine tim e and
place of meeting.
The following list of building abbreviations will help
in the location of classrooms.
ESL
GC

-East St. Louis Center
- J ohn Mason Peck General Classroom Building, Edwardsville
LB
-Lovejoy M emorial Library, Edwardsville
SL
-Science Laboratory Building, Edwardsville
W agner-W agner Building, Edwardsville

7

�8

GENERAL STUDIES AREA A ( GSA )

CouEdw~oE~~~J..~ui;&gt;escrip ri T ir~itle ... ········· ···n~y~·-···

·········pj~~e ···

MAN'S PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT
AND BIOLOGICAL INHERITANCE
(GSA)
101a- 3 Introduction to Physical Science ... ... .
SL 110S
Hakeem
Lect
12:30- 1:20
M W F
Hakeem
SL 1218
12 :30-2:20
Tu
Lab 001
Hakeem
Th
SL 1218
Lab 002
12:30-2:20
Hakeem
SL 1218
Th
Lab 003
10 :30-12:20
ESL 11S
Staff
Lect
8:30-9:20
M W F
ESL 124
Staff
M
Lab 401 9:30-11 :20
ESL
124
Staff
w
Lab 402 9 :30-11 :20
101 b-3 Introduction to Physical Science ......... .. .
SL nos
Boedeker
Lect
8 :30-9:20
M W F
SL 1218
Staff
Lab 001
7:30-9:20
Tu
SL 1218
Staff
Th
Lab 002
7 :30-9:20
SL 1218
Staff
Lab 003
9 :30-11 :20
Tu
101c-3 Introduction to Physical Science ................. ........ .
Probst
SL nos
Lect
8:30-9 :20
Tu Th
SL 1209
Jason
Lab 001
7:30-9 :20
M
White
w
SL 1209
Lab 002
7:30-9: 20
SL 1209
F
Jason
Lab 003
7 :30-9:20
SL 1209
Probst
Tu
Lab 004
9 :30-11 :20
White
SL 1209
Th
Lab OOS
9:30-11 :20
ESL 11S
Stallard
Tu Th
Lect
12:30-1: 20
Stallard
ESL
12S
Tu
Lab 401 1.:30-3 :20
Stallard
ESL 12S
Lab 402 1 :30-3:20
Th
200-3 Earth Science
Yarbrough
SL 1215
8:30-9:20
M w
001
Yarbrough
Th
SL 121S
7:30-9 :20
SL 121S
Collier
002
11:30-12 :20 M w
Th
SL 121S
Collier
11 :30-1:20
Yarbrough
6:00-7:SO
w
SL
1215
M
E003
401
10:30-12:20 M w
ESL 112
Gore
201a-3 M a n's Biological Inheritance .... ....... .
Day student enrolls in lecture and one lab.
Lect
7:30-8:20
M W
SL 110S
Ratzlaff
Lab 001
7 :30-9:20
Tu
SL 3216
Ratzlaff
Lab 002
7:30-9 :20
Th
SL 3216
Ra tzlaff
Lab 003
9:30-11: 20
Tu
SL 3216
Ratzlaff
2011&gt;-3 Man's Biological Inheritance ...... ..... ... ....... ........ .... ......... .
Day student enrolls in lectu re and one la.b.
Lect
8 :30-9: 20
M W
SL 3218
R. Parker
8:30-10 :20
Tu
Lab 001
SL 3218
R. Parker
Lab 002
8:30-10:20
Th
SL 3218
R. Parker
Lect
8 :30-9: 20
M W
ESL 212
R. Parker
Lab 401 8:30-10 :20
Tu
ESL 116
R. Parker
Lab 402 8:30-10:20
Th
ESL 116
R. P arker
201c-3 M a n's Biological Inheritance ............. .
Day student enrolls in lecture a nd one lab.
Lect
10:30-11 :20 M w
SL nos
Kumler
Lab 001
10:30- 12:20
Tu
SL 3218
Kumler
Lab 002
10:30-12 :20
Th
SL 3218
Kumler
312-3 Conservation of Natural Resources ....................... ... .
001
9 :30-10:20
TuWTh
GC 0306
Kazeck
002
11:30-12:20 M W F
GC 0306
Kircher
E003
6:20-7:3S
M w
GC 0306
Baker
330-3 Weather
...................... ...... .......... ..
E001
6 :20-7:3S
Tu Th
GC 0306
Bognar
356-3 Astronomy ...... . .. ... ......... ..... .............. ............ ........... ... .....
001
12 :30-1:20
M W F
SL 0226
Sanders
3631&gt;-3 Philosophy of Science (Same as GSC 363b) ........ ... .
001
1:30-2:20
MTu Th
GC 0314
Livergood
365-3 Human Origins
... .... ....... ..... .
001
12:30- 1:20
M W F
GC 1414
Schusky

MAN'S SOCIAL INHERITANCE AND
S 0 CIA L R ES P 0 N SIBIL IT IE S (GSB )
101a-3 Survey of Western Tradition ................................. ...
8 :30-9:20
M W F
GC 1402
001
GC 1412
11:30-12:20 M W F
002
8:30-9 :4S
Tu Th
GC 1402
003
6:20-7:35
Tu Th
GC 1402
E004
401
11 :30-12 :45
Tu Th
ESL 20S

Koepke
Guffy
Lossau
Lossau

Fogel

��}0

---

GENERAL S TUDIES AREA C ( GSC )

Course No.- Hours Descriptive Title
Edw. E. St. Lou is
Ti me

251a- 3
003
004
E005
251b-3
001
002
3 13-3
001
335-3
001
357a-3
001
360-3
001
363b-3
001

· ····· ·· ········o ~y~- ················ -r;i ~~~ ··· ·· ···· ·-·····-- i~~-~;~~t~-~

Literary and P hilosophical Masterpieces ... ................................ .
12:30-1: 20
MTu Th
GC 0303
Staff
I :30-2 :20
MTu Th
GC 0307
Staff
8:20-9:35
M W
GC 0303
Staff
Literary and Philosophical Masterpieces .
9:30-10:20
MTu W
GC 0303
Knoll
II :30-12:20 MTuW
GC 0309
Mogan
Folklore ....................... ..... .
II :30-12:20 MTuW
GC 0303
Brunvand
Studies in Short Fiction
10:30-11:20 MTuW
GC 0309
Going
Music History and Literature
.................... .. .
Jl :30-1 2:20
M W F
GC 1402
Stevens
Arts and Ideals in Famous Cities ................................... ... .. .. .. .... .
*12:30-1: 20
MTuWTh
GC 0304
Marti
Philosophy of Science (Same as GSA 363b ) .
1:30-2 :20
MTu Th
GC 0314
Livergood

ORGANIZATION AND
COMMUN ICATION OF
(GSD )

IDEAS

101 a-3 English Composition --- -··············
7:30- 8 :20
111TuWTh
001
8:30-9:20
MTuWTh
002
9:30-10:20
MTuWTh
003
004
10:30-11: 20 111Tu WTh
005
II :30-12: 20 MTuWT h
.:006
6:20-8:10
M w
E007
8:20-10:10
Tu Th
401
7:30--8:20
MTuWTh
12:30-1:20
MTuWTh
402
E403
6 :20-8: 10
Tu Th
101b-3 English Composition -------- --------· ·-001
7 :30-8: 20
MTuWTh
12 :30-1: 20
MTuWTh
002
E003
6 :20--8: 10
Tu T h
401
10:30-11: 20 111TuWTh
103-3 Oral Communication of Ideas
7:30-8 :20
001
M w F
002
8 :30-9: 20
M w F
003
9:30-10:20
M w F
10:30- 11:20
004
111 w F
005
10:30-11:20 M w F
006
12:30-1:20
M w F
007
I :30-2 :20
M w F
401
7:30-8:20
M w F
402
8 :30-9:20
M w F
403
9:30-10:20
M w F
404
12:30-1: 20
M w F
112a-3 Introduction to Mathematics
001
12:30-1: 20
M w F
401
9:30-10 :20
M w F
112c-3 Introduction to Mathematics _
II :30-12 :20
001
M w F
401
10:30-11 :20 M w F
114a-3 College Algebra -------- ------ -- ----····
001
8 :30- 9:20
111 w F
002
7 :30-8 :20
111 w F
003
12:30-1: 20
M w F
401
9:30-10:20
M w F
402
10:.30-11:20
M w F
114b-3 College Algebra ... ---------- -------- ------··-···-· ···
12:30-1 :20
M w F
001
12 :30-l :20
M w F
401
114d- 3 Statistics .
5:30-8:10
w
"001
H:20-9:35
.:401
Tu Th
123- 9 Elementary French ---·-----------------8:30-10:20
MTuWTh
001
126-9 Elementary German
7:30-8 :20
MTuWTh
001
10:30-11:20 MTuWTh
140-9 Elementary Spanish
9:30-11:20
MTuWTh
001
*H-weeks eourse

GC 0309
GC 0302
GC 0302
GC 0303
GC 0302
GC 0302
GC 0303
ESL 222
ESL 222
ESL 222

Staff
Staff
Staff
Staff
Staff
Stafl
Staff
Staff
Staff
Staff

GC 0408
GC 0302
GC 0302
ESL 222

Staff
Staff
Staff
Staff

GC 3315
GC 3315
GC 3315
GC 3315
GC 3302
GC 3315
GC 3315
ESL 106
ESL 222
ESL 106
ESL 106
SL 1225
ESL 222

Kluth
Ha wkin s

Kluth
White
Hawkins
Hawkin s
Pritner
Birdman

Birdman
Birdman

Birdm an

Staff
Staff

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

SL 1225
ESL 204
SL 1225
SL 1225
SL 2224
ESL 124A
ESL 221

Staff
Staff
Stafl
Poynor
Goering

J. Brown
]. Brown
··-···- ··------····

GC 0312
ESL 204

Staff
J. Brown

GC 1410
ESL 204

Luan
Luan

GC 2405

Stafl

GC 0409
GC 0409

Sra hn
Spahn

GC O.'l04

Staff

�S U MMER

II

G EN E RAL STUDI ES AREA E ( GSE )

HEALTH AND PHYS I CAL
DE VEL 0 PM EN T (GSE )
!03c-1 Social Dance (Men)
ll :30--12:20
Tu Th
001
!04a- 1 Archery (Men ) --- --- ------ --------- ----- --- ---- ------11
:30--12:
20
M
W
001
12: 30- 1:20
002
M W
104c-1 Basketball (Men )
401
10:30-11 :20
Tu Th
! 04d- l Bowling (Men )
( Lane rental fee S6, payable first class meeting)
001
8: 30--9 :20
M W
401
8: 30--9:20
Tu Th
!04e-l Golf (Men)
001
7:30--8 :20
M w
401
7 :30--8 :20
Tu Th
Tu Th
402
9:30--10: 20
104j-1 Softball (M en )
001
9 :30--10:20
M w
!13c- 1 Social Dance (Women)
Tu Th
001
ll :30--12: 20
! 14a-1 Archery (Women )
001
l\: 30--12:20 M W
002
12 :30--1:20
M W
114d-1 Bowling (Women)
(Lane rental fee S6, payable first class meeting)
001
8: 30- 9 :20
M W
401
8: 30- 9 :20
Tu Th
114e- 1 Golf (Women )
001
7: 30--8 :20
M w
7:30--8:20
Tu Th
401
9:30- 10:20
Tu Th
402
201-3 H ealthful Living --------------- ---001
9:30-10:20
M W F
E002
5 :30--8: 10
111
401
9 :30--10:20
111 W F
E402
5:30--8: 10
Tu
ACCOUNTING

GC 2405

Bowman

GC 3102
GC 3102

Bow man
Bowman

ESL 009

Staff

GC 3102
ESL 009

Staff
Staff

GC 3102
ESL 009
ESL 009

Staff
Staff
Staff

GC 3102

Staff

GC 2405

Bowma n

GC 3102
GC 3102

Bo wman
Bowman

GC 3102
ESL 009

Staff
Staff

GC 3102
ESL 009
ESL 009

Staff
Staff
Staff

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

GC 1402
GC 2405
ESL 205
ESL 215

( ACCT )

25la-4 Elementary Accounting I _
·· ·········
MTuWTh
7 :30-8:20
GC 3303
001
GC 3303
E002
6:20--8 :10
M w
ESL 203
ll :30--12:20
401
111 WThF
251b-4 Elementary Accounting II --- --····· ·· ········· ····8:30--9:20
MTuWTh
GC 3303
001
ESL 203
401
8:30-9 :20
MTu ThF
25 l c- 4 Elementary Accounting III _
9:30--10:20
MTuWTh
GC 3303
001
401
10:30-11 :20
MTu ThF
ESL 203
6: 20- 8: 10
ES L 203
E402
Tu Th
453b--4 Advanced Accounting .
6 :20- 8: 10
GC 2304
E001
111 w
ANTH R OPOLOGY

I

ART

OOl
IOOb--5
001
IOOc-5
001
203a-4
001
203b- 4
001

···· ·--

111illes
Small
Small
Houser

Bedel
Milles
Bedel
Bedel
Small

(ANTH )

304-4 The Origins of Civilization __ __
MTuWTh
8:30--9:20
001
400-4 Man and Culture _
MTuWTh
9:30-10: 20
001

IOOa-5

Klein
Klein
Moehn
111oehn

GC 1414

Voget

-- ---- ---····· ·· ·- · -

GC 1414

Vogel

(AR T )

Basic Studio _
7:30- 9:20
Basic Studio _
7:30--9 :20
Basic Studio _
7:30- 9:20

· ···· ··· · ·· ········

SL 0222

Ri c hard so n

MTuWThF

SL 0222

R ic hard son

MTuWTh F

SL 0222

Richardson

111TuW

F

Wagn e r

Ca nnon

MTuW

F

\Vagne r

Ca nn on

MTuWThF
·· ·· ··· ·· ·· ········· ·

Beginning Ceramics .

10:30--12: 20
Beginnin g Ceramics .
10 :30--12:20
*8-weeks co urse

�}2

ART (ART)

Cou£dw~ro.E~~~L~ui;&gt;escriptiTi !eitlc .. ····· ····· ··n~y~· ····

..... -··pj~~~ ········· ······· ·· i·~~-t~~~l~~

300a- 4
001
300b-4
001
31 Oa-4
001
310b-4
001
310c--4
001
405-2 to

Art Education ----- ----- ---------- ----- ------- ---- ----- -- ---------- ------------- ---- ----- ---- -* 11 :30-1:40
MTuWTh
SL 0209 Buddemeyer
Art Education ------ ---- --------------- ------- ---* 8:30-10:40
MTuWTh
SL 0209
Milovich
Painting
8:30-10: 20
MTuW F
SL 0218
Huntley
Painting
8 :30-10:20
MTuW F
SL 0218
Huntley
Painting --- --------- -- ----- --- -- ---- --- -- ------ -- ---------- --- ------8 :30-10:20
MTuW F
SL 0218
Huntley
12 Studio in Sculpture
ll :30-1:20
Huntley
001
MTuW F
SL 0218
406-2 to 12 Studio in Painting ----- -- ---- ---- -- -- ······· ·············
Huntley
ll :30- 1 :20
MTuW F
001
SL 0218
416-2 to 12 Studio in Prints _
9:30-11:20
Richardson
001
MTuWTh
SL 0210
426-2 to 12 Studio in Pottery -- ------- ----- --- --- -------- -- ---- ---------- ---- ---- ------- ---- ---001
1:30-3 :20
MTuW F
Wag ner
Cannon
566-4 Research in Art Education _
001
• Arranged
Altvater
B 0 TAN Y

(BOT)

202-5 General Botany ----------- ---- -- -- ------- ----- ---- -- --- --- --Lect
8 :30-9 :20
M W F
SL 3211
Lab 001
7:30-10 :20
Tu Th
SL 3211

BUSINESS ED U CAT I 0 N

(BSED )

341-4 Calculating Machines
E001
6:20-8:10
M w
SL 1224
406--4 Teaching Office Practice
001
*10:30-11 :20 MTuWThF
SL 1224
500- 2 to 5 Readings in Business Education _ ------------ --- ---- ----- -----001
• Arranged
501-2 to 5 Individual Resea rch in Business Education
001
*Arranged
502-2 or 4 Research in Business Education _
001
*8 :30-9: 20
MTuWThF
SL 1210
505-4 Workshop in Business Education
001
* 11 :30- 1 :20 MTu WThF SL 1210
506--4 Principles and Problems of Business Education _
001
*9:30-10 :20
MTuWThF
SL 1210
507--4 Application and Fundamentals of Data Processing in
Business Education
001
*7:30-8:20
MTuWThF
SL 1224
508--4 Administration and Supervision in Business Education _
001
* 10:30-ll :20 MTuWThF
GC 0408
510--4 Improvement of Instruction in Secretarial Subjects
001
* 7 :30-8 :20
MTu WThF
SL 1210
599- 2 to 9 Thesis
001
• Arranged

CHEMISTRY

Palmer
Shell
Staff
Staff
Brady
Maedke
Maedke
Miller
Houser
P almer
Sta ff

(CHEM )

llla-5 Chemistry Principles and Inorganic Chemistry _
Lect
11:30- 12:20
M W F
SL 1105
Lab 001
11:30- 12:20
Tu
SL 1105
7:30-10 :30
Th
SL 221S
11:30-12:20
Th
SL nos
Lab 002
7:30-10:30
Tu
SL 2215
lll c-5 Chemistry Principles and Inorganic Chemistry _
Lect
11:30-12:20
M W F
SL 2224
Lab 001
ll :30-2:30
Tu Th
SL 2215
Lab 002
12:30-3:30
M W
SL 221S
Lect E
6 :20-7 :SO
Tu Th
ESL 124A
Lab E401 8 :00-ll :00
Tu Th
ESL 125
240--4 Organic Chemistry _
Lect
10:30-ll :20 M WTh
ESL 124A
Lab 401 7:30-10: 30
ESL 123
M
Lab 402 7:30- 10:30
w
ESL 123
412-3 Inorganic Preparations _
Lect E
6 :20-7:10
Tu
SL 2224
Lab E001
7:20-10:20
Tu Th
SL 221S
433-3 Intermediate Quantitative Analysis
*8-weeks course

Kumler
Kumler

J aso n
J ason
J ason
Jaso n
Jason

Rands
Rands
Rands
Stall ard
Stall ard
Probst
Probst
P robst
Whi te
White

�SUMMER

CHEMISTRY (C HEM )

Course No.-Hours Descriptive Title
Edw . E. St. Louis
Time

Lect E
Lab E001

6:20--7:10
7:20--10:20

Days

M

W

w

SL 2224
SL 2217

C 0 M PAR AT IV E LITER AT U R E

Firschin g
Firsching

(C LT )

310b-4 Modern European Drama .
001
8:30--9:20
MTuWTh
GC 2307
310e-4 Modern European Novel ... .................... .
001
9:30--10:20
MTuWTh
GC 2307

ECONOMICS

13

Guenther
Guenther

(ECON)

210-5 Principles of Economics .............................. .
001
9:30-10:20
MTuWThF
GC 0312
E002
5:30--8:10
Tu Th
GC 0304
401
8:30- 9:20
MTuWThF
ESL 106
E402
5:30--7:45
Tu Th
ESL 205
310-4 Labor Problems ..........................
.:001
6 :20--8:10
M W
GC 0314
401
9:30--10:20
MTuWTh
ESL 104
315-4 Money and Banking I ......................... .
E001
8 :20--10:10
Tu Th
GC 0314
E401
8 :20--10:10
M W
ESL 104

L. Drake
Schwier
Luan
Thorson

C. Drake
C. Drake
Livingston

Hashimi

EDUCATION ADMINISTRATION
(EDAD)
355-4
001
002
420-4
001
431-4
001
434-4
001

Philosophy of Education .............. ........... ..... ........... ... .
9:30--10:20
MTuWTh
GC 0314
Curry
1 :30--2:20
MTu \VTh
GC 2410
Hofmann
Legal Basis of American Education .
*8:30--9:20
MTuWThF
GC 0314 Harry Smith
History of Education in the United States ................ .
*2:30--3 :20
MTu\VThF
GC0314
Curry
Administrator's Workshop
.................. .
t8:30--4:00
MTuWThF
GC 1410
Andree,
Wilkins
456-4 School Supervision
001
*7 :30--8 :20
MTuWThF
GC 2412
Wheat
490-4 Workshop in Comparative Education .
001
~(European Study Tour)
Boss
500-4 Research Methods ....................... .
001
* 12:30--1:20
MTu WThF
GC 2302
Reuter
002
*10:30--11 :20 MTu\VThF
GC 2302
Staff
503-4 Seminar in Philosophy of Education ................... .
001
* 1 :30--2:20
MTu WThF
GC 2302
Villemain
524-4 School Administration
001
* 9:30--10:20
MTu WThF
GC 2302
Ackerlund
525-4 Personnel Administration
001
*11 :30--12:20
MTu\VThF
GC 2302
Reuter
533-4 School Buildings .......................... ............... .
001
* 8 :30--9:20
MTu \VThF
GC 2303
Andree
534b-4 School Business Administration ............................. .
001
*7 :30--8:20
MTu\VThF
GC 2306
Wilkins
554-4 Contrasting Philosophies of Education ...................... .
001
*11 :30--12:20
MTuWThF
GC 2303
Curry
556-4 Seminar in Educational Supervision .............................
001
*9:30--10:20
MTuWThF
GC 2303
Wheat
560-4 Curriculum ....................... .................................
001
*10:30--11:20
MTuWThF
GC 2303
Staff
565-4 The Junior College ......................................................................... .
001
• 2:30--3:20
MTu WThF
GC 2403
Goodwin

EDUCATION ELEMENTARY

(EDEL)

314-4 Elementary School Methods ............ .
001
8:30--9 :20
MTuWTh
GC 2412
Jordan
002
11:30--12:20 MTuWTh
GC 2412
Palmer
316-4 Kindergarten-Primary Methods and Curriculum ........... .
001
10:30--11:20 MTuWTh
GC 2412
Kelley
33 7-4 Reading in the Elementary Schools ................................ .
001
8:30--9 :20
MTuWTh
GC 0309
Steinbrook
002
12:30--1:20
MTu WTh
GC 2412
Kelley
*8-weeks course
tAugust 16-August 26
Uune 9- June 30

�/4

----

EDU CATION ELEMENTARY (E DEL )

Co u£dw~oE--:-~~~ L:ui~ cscrip tivTinYeitle ······· · - ·· -····o~;~· - ·

351d-8 to 16 Elementary Student Teaching
001
Arranged
Wehling
351e-4 to 8 Advanced Elementary Student Teaching
001
Arran ged
Wehling
413-4 Children's Literature .. ..
. .. ................................ .
001
*8:30-9:20
MTuWThF
GC 3302 R. Carpenter
415-4 Improvement of Instruction in Arithmetic in the Elementary
School
... .. .. ....... ................... . ................... .
001
* 7:30-8:20
MTuWThF
GC 2304
Steinbrook
442-4 Materials and Methods in Elementary School Science .
001
* 1:30-2:20
WTu WThF
GC 0304
Comer
505-4 Improvement of Reading Instruction .
001
*9:30- 10:20
MTuWThl"
GC 0406
Staff
515-4 Special Problems in the Teaching of Arithmetic in the
Elementary School ........... .......... .... .
001
*1 2 :30-1:20
MTu WThF
GC 2303
Stein brook
518-2 Supervision of Student Teachers .
001
*1:30-2 :20
MTu Th
GC 2403
Wehling
52 1a-4 Diagnosis and Correction of Reading Disabilities I
001
*9:30-10:20
MTuWThF
GC 0408
Bear
541-4 Selected Teaching and Curriculum Problems in Elementary
School Science .
001
*2:30-3:20
MTuWThF
GC 0304
Bliss
542-4 Language Arts in the Elementary School ................ .
001
*7:30-8:20
MTuWThF
GC 2403
Jordan
543-4 Teaching the Social Studies in the Elementary School ...
001
*1:30-2:20
MTuWThF
GC 2412
Swerdlin
557-4 The Elementary Principalship . ......................... .. ....... .. ... .
001
*10:30-11:20 MTuWThF
GC 2410
Palmer
561-4 The Elementary School Curriculum
001
*11:30-12:20
MTuWThF
GC 3302
Comer

EDUCATION SECONDARY

(EDS)

315-4 High School Methods .
............ .. ........ .. ............. .
001
7:30-8:20
MTu WTh
GC 2303 Herb Sm itb
002
9:30-10:20
MTuWTh
GC 2403
Smyers
352d- 8 to 12 Secondary Student Teaching
....... ........... .
001 through 026 Arranged
Wehling
001 Agriculture
014 Home Economics
002 Art
015 Industrial Education
003 Biology
016 Journalism
017 Mathematics
004 Business
005 Chemistry
018 Music
006 Economics
019 Physical Education
007 English
020 Physics
008 Foreign Language
021 Sociology
009 General Science
022 Social Studies
010 Geography
023 Speech
011 Government
024 Library Service
01 2 Health Education
025 Psychology
013 History
026 School Nursing
352e-4 to 8 Secondary Student Teaching (See above listing under 352d)
001 through 026 Arranged
Wehling
407-4 The Junior High School
001
*8:30-9:20
MTuWThF
GC 2302
Hileman
440-4 Teaching Reading in High School
. ............... .
001
*7:30- 8:20
MTuWThF
GC 2302 Steinkellner
488-4 Teaching the Social Studies in the Secondary Schools ....
001
*11 :30-12:20 MTuWThF
GC 2304
Staff
508-4 Seminar: Trends in Selected Areas in Secondary Schools
001
*12 :30-1:20
MTuWThF
GC 2307
Andree
518-2 Supervision of Student Teachers
......... .................... .
001
* 1:30-2: 20
MTu Th
GC 3316
Wehlin g
521a-4 Diagnosis and Correction of Reading Disabilities I
001
* 9:30-10:20
MTu WThF
GC 0408
Bear
562-4 The High School Curriculum .
001
* 1 :30-2:20
MTu WThF
GC 2303
Smyers
564-4 High School Principalship .
001
*10:30- 11 :20
MTuWThF
GC 2304
Madson
570-4 Extra-Class Activities
.... ........ ............. .
001
*7:30-8:20
MTuWThF
GC 2405
Madson
591-4 Workshop in Current Problems in Secondary Education ....
001
t8:30-4:00
MTuWThF
GC 2302
Boss
*8-weeks course

t August 16-August 26

�S U MM E R

S PEC IAL EDUCATION ( S P E )

Course No . -Hours Descri pt ive T itle
Ed\\'. E. St. Louis
Ti me

Days

S P EC I A L E D U C AT I 0 N

]5

lnstructor

(SP E )

410--4 Probl ems and Cha racteristics of Mentall y R etarded . . ................ .
001
*8 :30-9 :20
MTuWThF
GC 3316
Staff
4 12--4 Education of G ifted Children .................... .
001
* 11:30-12:20 MTu\VThF
GC 2307
Harris
4 13c-4 Directed O bservation of the Gifted ...
001
*Arranged
Staff
4 14- 4 The Exceptional Child ... .. ...... ..... .
001
* 10 :30- ll :20 MTu WThF GC 2307 Bommarito
420c-4 M ethods and Materials in the Education of the Gifted .
001
* 12 :30-1:20
MTuWThF
GC 0408
Staff
428--4 Speech Correction for the Class room T eacher (Same as
.................. ...... .
Sp C 428 )
001
*9 :30-10:20
MTuWThF
GC 2304
White
577--4 to 12 P racticum in Specia l Educa tion
001
Arra nged (Consent of Instr uctor )
Staff

ENG LI S H

(ENG )

302a--4 Survey of English Litera ture
001
ll:30-1 2 :20 MTuWTh
GC 2410
Staff
302b--4 Survey of English Litera ture
001
9:30-10:20
MTuWTh
GC 2412
Staff
302c-4 Survey of English Literature
£001
6:20-8 :10
1\1 w
GC 0304
Staff
309a- 4 Survey of American Literature ..... .
001
7 :30-8 :20
MTuWTh
GC 0302
Staff
309b-4 Survey of American Litera ture
E001
8 :20-IO :IO
M W
Staff
GC 0302
365- 4 Shakespeare ................................
001
11 :30-12:20 MTuWTh
Murphy
GC 0408
39 1-3 Usage in Spoken and Written English ..................... .
001
*8 :30-9 :20
MTuWTh
GC 0409
Ades
002
* 12 :30-1 :20
MTuWTh
GC 0409 L. Funkhouser
400-4 Introduction to English Linguistics .....
001
*9:30-10 :20
MTuWThF
GC 0409
Van Syoc
404b-4 M iddle English Literature (Chaucer ) ..
001
*8 :30-9: 20
MTuWT hF
GC 2306
Mogan
4 12b--4 English Nondramatic Literatu re ( 17th Century ) .
001
* 10: 30-ll :20 MTuWThF
GC 0302
Havens
412c-4 English Nondramatic Literature ( 18th Centu ry ) .........
001
* ll: 30-12:20 MTuWThF
GC 0412
Slattery
43 l a-4 Major American Writers ........................................ .. ...... .
001
* 1 :30-2 :20
MTuWThF
GC 0302
Zanger
443- 4 V ictorian Prose .............................................. .
001
* 12 :30-1:20
MTuWThF
SL 3222
Duncan
486--4 Workshop in High School English .
001
*7:30-8 :20
MTuWThF
GC 0303
S te inma n
495b--4 Literary Criticism ....... ...... ..... ..... .
001
*9 :30-10 :20
MTu WThF
GC 0412
Brown
504--4 Advanced English Syntax .............................................. .
001
*8 :30- 9 :20
MTuWThF
SL 3222
Van Syoc
514-4 Studies in R estoration and 18th Centu ry Literatu re ....... .
001
*9:30-10 :20
MTu'WThF
SL 3222
Graham
520--4 Studies in Romantic Writers .................. .. .
001
*10: 30-ll :20
MTu WThF
SL 3222
Staff
52 1-4 Studies in V ictorian Poetry ........................................... .
001
*11 :30-12:20 MTu WThF
Goin g
GC 3303
531--4 Studies in American Colonial Period ....
001
* 12 :30-1:20
MTu WThF
Havens
GC 3303
536--4 Studies in Later 19th Century American Writers ....... .
001
*1 :30-2 :20
MTuWThF
GC 0303
Zanger

FOR E I G N

L ANG U AGE

French (Fr )
123-3 French Conversation
001
8 :30-10 :20

F

GC 2405

Staff

F
F

GC 0409
GC 0409

Spahn
Spahn

German (Ger )
126- 3 Germa n Conversation ................. .
001
7: 30- 8 :20
10 :30-ll :20
*8-weeks course

�16

FOREIGN LANGUAGE ( GER )

0

CouEdw~oE~~~ L~ ui;&gt;escripti'Tin~itlc ................ ~~

251-4 Scientific German
001
9:3{}..-10:20

MTuWTh

Spanish {Span)
140-3 Spanish Conversation
001
9:30-11:20
GEOGRAPHY

................ }lj~~~ ...

F

GC 2306

Ryberg

GC 0304

Staff

(GEOG )

310a-3 Introduction to Cartographic Methods
8 :3{}..-9:45
Tu Th
001
SL 1216
Guffy
424-4 Regional Problems in Conservation .
001
*12:3{}..-1:20
MTuWThF
GC 1412
Kazeck
461a-4 Advanced R egional Geography: Anglo-America .
001
10:3{}..-11:20 MTuWTh
GC 1414
Baker
462a-4 Advanced Regional Geography: Europe
001
8:3{}..-9:20
MTuWTh
GC 0306
Bognar
501-4 Geographic Techniques II .
001
10:30-11:20 MTuW F
GC 0306
Koepke
522-4 Seminar in Regional Geography
E001
6:2(}.._8:10
M w
GC 1412
Collier
530-4 Independent Studies in Geography
E001
6 :2{}..-8: 10
Tu Th
GC 1414
Staff
599-2 to 9 Thesis
............................................................ .
001
Arranged
Kazeck
GOVERNMENT
210-4
001
002
003
004
E005
232-4
001
340-3
001
3901&gt;-4
001
415-3
E001
451-3
001
457-4
001
484b-4
001
495c-4
001

(GOVT)

American Government .......... ..................
MTuWTh
8 :3{}..-9 :20
GC 0406
Maier
10:3{}..-11 :20 MTuWTh
GC 0406
Stahnke
11:3{}..-12:20 MTuWTh
Mace
GC 0406
MTuWTh
12:3{}..-1: 20
GC 0406
Nasr
6 :2{}..-8: 10
GC 0406
Maier
M W
State and Local Government
8:3{}..-9:20
MTuWTh
GC 0408
Staff
The Legislative Process
1:3{}..-2:20
MTuWTh
GC 0408
Mace
Comparative European Governments ...
8 :3{}..-9 :20
MTu WTh
GC 0413
Stahnke
Political Behavior
6:20-7:35
Tu Th
GC 0412
Staff
International Politics of Europe
........................... .
10:3{}..-11 :20 MTu Th
GC 0412
Maier
Government and Politics in the Near and Middle East .
9:3{}..-10:20
MTuWTh
GC 0411
Nasr
History of Political Theories {Same as Phil 484b) ..................... .
*11:30- 12:20 MTuWThF
GC 0409
Staff
Constitutional Law
12 :3{}..-1 :20
MTu WTh
GC 0412
Kerr

GUIDANCE

(GUID )

305-4 Educational Psychology
001
1:3{}..-2: 20
MTuWTh
GC 3316
E002
6:2{}..-8:10
Tu Th
GC 2307
401
*9:3{}..-10 :20
MTuWThF
ESL 221
E402
6:2(}.._8:10
M w
ESL 203
412-4 Mental Hygiene (Meets with Psyc 432) .
001
*7: 3{}..-8:20
MTuWThF
GC 3302
E401
*6: 2(}.._8 :10
Tu Th
ESL 221
420-4 Educational Statistics ...
SL 1225
001
*9: 30- 10: 20
MTuWThF
422-4 Educational Measurements I
001
* 7 :3(}.._8 :20
MTu WThF
GC 2309
401
*8:3{}..-9:20
MTuWThF
ESL 221
501-2 to 8 Special Research Problems .
001
Arranged
002
Arranged
Arranged
003
511-4 Educational Implications of Learning Theories .
001
*12:3{}..-1:20
MTuWThF
GC 0309
522-4 Educational Measurement II .......
001
*10:3{}..-11 :20 MTuWThF
GC 0413
526-4 Techniques in Individual Guidance (Elementary ) .
*8-weeks course

Swerdlin

Staff
Staff
Staff
Staff
Staff
Brinkmann

Staff
McCall
Troyer
Brinkmann
Pancrazio

McMa.hon
McCall

�r

SUMMER

GUIDANCE ( GUID)

17

001
002
528--4
001
535-4
001
536-4
001
53 7- 4
001
538-4
001
541-4

(majors)
*9:30-10:20
MTu\VThF GC 0413
Rochester
(nonmajors) *9:30-10:20
MTuWThF
GC 3302
Pancrazio
Advanced Guidance of the Individua l ..... .
*11:30-12:20 MTuWThF
GC 2309
Soper
Introduction to Individual Measurement .
*9:30-10 :20
MTuWThF
GC 2309
Harris
Appraisal of Intelligence (Children &amp; Adolescents) ....
* 1: 30-2:20
MTuWThF
GC 2307
Rochester
Counseling Theory and Practice I ......................... .... .
*10 :30-ll :20 MTu \VThF
SL 2212
Pancrazio
Counseling Theory and Practice II ..... ...................... .
*12:30-1 :20
MTuWThF
GC 2309
Soper
Occupational Information and Guidance
401
*12:30-1:20
MTuWThF
ESL 104
Van Horn
542-4 Basic Principles of Guidance
.................................... .
001
* 10 :30-11:20 MTuWThF
GC 2309
Starr
5:30-8: 10
Tu
GC 2403
Davis
£002
401
• 1:30-2 :20
MTu WThF
ESL 104
Staff
543-4 Guidance Through Groups ........................................
Staff
001
* 11 :30-12:20 MTuWThF
GC 0413
545j-4 Seminar in Guidance: Organization and Administration .
001
* 12:30-1:20
MTuWThF
GC 3302
Davis
562a-4 Child Development in Education ........................................ .
401
*9:30-10:20
MTuWThF
ESL 203
Troyer
562b--4 Adolescent Development in Education
*1 :30-2:20
MTuWThF
Davis
001
GC 2309
Troyer
*8:30-9 :20
MTuWThF
401
ESL 205
575a-l to 12 Practicum in Counseling .... ..... ..... .. ...
V. Moore
001
• Arranged
V. Moore
*Arranged
002

HEALTH ED U CAT I 0 N

(H ED )

480s-4 Workshop in Safety Education ...
*8: 30-9:20
MTuWThF
001

HISTORY

Spear

GC 2309

(HIST )

312-4 Central Europe in the Nineteenth Century ................... .
001
10:30-11:20 MTuWTh
GC 0411
Kimball
365-4 History of Chinese Civilization .............................. .
001
8:30-9:20
MTuWTh
GC 0411
Huang
405-3 The American Civil War ..... ... ........................................................ .
£001
6:20-7:35
Tu Th
GC 0411
Branz
412a-3 Intellectual History of the United States ................... .
001
8:30-9:20
M WTh
GC 0403
Pearson
417b-4 Advanced English History ............................................. .
001
11:30-12:20 MTu WTh
GC 0403
Haas
430c-3 Late Modern Europe
........................................................... .
001
9: 30- 10:20
M WTh
GC 0403
Gallaher
500- 3 History Seminar . . .................................................... .
001
12:30-1:20
M WTh
GC 0403
Gallaher

INSTRUCT I 0 N A L MATER I A L S

(IM )

417-4 Audio-visual Methods in Education ................................ .
001
9:30-10:20
MTuWTh
LB 0042
Mitchell
002
*!2:30-1:20
MTuWThF
LB 0042
Madison
003
*10 :30-ll :20 MTuWThF
LB 0042
Mitchell
445-4 Prepa ra tion of Teacher-Made Audio-visual Materials ........... .
001
• 1 :30-3 :20
MTu
LB 0042
Madison
*1:30-2 :20
W
LB 0042
Madison
548--4 Supervision and Administration of an Audio-visual Program .
*8:30-9 :20
MTuWThF
LB 0042
Mitchell
001

J 0 URN ALI S M (JRNL )
201-3 News Writing and Editing I .....................................................
001
9 :30-10:20
MTuW
GC 3316
R. Lee
...................................................... .
345-3 History of Journalism
001
*12 :30-1:20
MTuW
GC 2306
R. Lee

MANAGEMENT

(MGT )

I 70-4 Introduction to Business Administration ..................... .
001
8:30-9:20
MTuWTh
GC 0312
*8-weeks course

Scott

�/8

MA NAG EMENT ( MGT )

170-4 Introduction to Business Administration .
002
11:30--12:20 MTu WTh
GC 0304
Blackledge
E003
8 :20--10:10
M W
GC 0312
Miller
ESL 104
401
8 :30--9: 30
MTu WTh
Blackledge
ESL 115
E402
8 :20--10 :10
Tu Th
Shell
240-4 Introduction to Data Processing .................. ........ .
E001
6 :20--8 :10
M w
GC 0309
Miller
271-4 Business Writing .
. .. ............ .
001
8:30--9: 20
MTuWTh
GC 0412
Shell
E401
6:20--8:10
M W
ESL 221
Ho use r
320-4 Corporation Finance .......... .. ......... .
001
10 :30--11 :20 MTuWTh
GC 3316
Meador
;:401
6:20--8: 10
Tu Th
ESL 104
Meador
340-4 Business Organization and Management .
ESL 104
Meador
E401
8 :20--10:10
Tu Th
361-4 Business Report Writing .
E001
8:20--10:10
M w
GC 04ll
Palmer
371-4 Business Law I.
GC 2410
E001
6 :20-8:10
M W
Heath
ESL 204
401
9:30--10 :20
MTuWTh
Heath
372-4 Business Law II ................ .. ...............
ESL 104
Heath
401
11:30--1 2 :20 MTuWTh
421-4 Management of Business Finance ....
E001
8: 20--10 :10
Tu Th
GC M06
Scott
485-4 Problems in Personnel Management .
ESL 204
Blackledge
E401
6:20- 8: 10
Tu Th
540-4 History and Theory of Management
E001
8:20-10:10
M w
GC 0412
Ko ri
MARKETING

(MKTG)

230-5 Principles of Marketing ...
GC 2410
MTuWThF
001
7:30--8:20
E401
5 :30--7:45
M W
ESL 205
331-4 Retailing
E401
8:20--10 :10
M W
ESL 106
337-4 Principles of Salesmanship .
401
10:30--ll :20 MTuWTh
ESL 106
438-4 Sales Management ... ....................................... .
E001
8 :20--10:10
Tu Th
GC 3303
490-4 Marketing Research and Analysis ....
E001
6 :20--8:10
Tu Th
GC 0309
MATHEMATICS

Vincent
Vincent
Vincent
Gwin
Gwin

Gwin

(MATH)

100-0 Elementary Mathematics .
Staff
MTu ThF
001
12:30--1: 20
GC 0306
ESL 221
Staff
MTu ThF
401
12 :30--1 :20
111a-5 Elementary Analysis ..... .
001
8 :30--9 :20
MTu WThF
SL 2224
Poynor
111 b--5 Elementary Analysis ................... ... .............. .
001
11:30- 12 :20 MTuWThF
SL 3225
Staff
150a-4 Elementary Calculus and Analytic Geometry .. ............ ................ .
001
8:30--9 :20
M WThF
SL 3225
Goering
150b--4 Elementary Calculus and Analytic Geometry .
001
10 :30--11:20 M WThF
SL 2224
Goering
252a-4 Calculus and Analytic Geometry
001
9:30--10:20
MTu ThF
SL 2224
Staff
252b--4 Calculus and Analytic Geometry .
£001
6:20--8:10
Tu Th
SL 1225
Staff
300-4 The Real Number System
.. ................... .... ..... .
£001
6:20--8: 10
M W
SL 1225
Staff
310-4 The Teaching of Elementary M athematics .
001
10:30--11:20
M WThF
SL 1225
Gwillim
400-3 History of Mathematics .
001
* 8 :30--9 :20
M WThF
SL 0226
Gwillim
415-4 Non-Euclidean Geometry
001
* 11:30--12:20 MTuWThF
GC 2306
Staff
425-3 Theory of Numbers
001
*9 :30--10:20
TuWThF
SL 3225
Rutledge
. .................
433- 3 Theory of Point Sets ...... ..................
001
*10:30--ll: 20
MTuW F
GC3303
Poynor
440-4 Modern Algebra for Teachers (National Science Foundation
Institute )
401
11:00--12:00 MTuWThF
ESL 105
Staff
*8-weeks course

�SUMMER

MATHEMATICS ( MATH )

19

442-4 Survey of Geometry ( National Science Foundation Ins titute ) .
401
8:20-9:20
MTu\VThf
ESL 103
Staff
446-4 The Structure of Elementary School Mathematics ...
001
*12:30-1:20
MTuWThF
SL 3225
Gwillim
447-4 The Structure of Secondary School Mathematics ( National
Sc ience Foundation Institu te ) ....... .

Staff
401
8 :20-9:20
MTuWThf
ESL 105
Staff
402
11:00-12:00
MTuWThf
ESL 105
541-4 Sets and Probability ....... ....... .... .
001
*10:30-11 :20 MTuWThF'
GC 0312
Rutledge
550e-2 Seminar in Mathematics Education (National Science
Foundation Institute )
....................... .
401
1 :00-2:00
M
Th
ESL 103
Staff
402
1 :00-2 :00
Tu
F
ESL 103
Staff

MUSIC

(MUS)

002b-1 University Chorus .
Van Camp
M W F GC3417
11:30-12 :20
001
010b-1 C lass Applied Music-Woodwinds .................. .
Mellott
8:30-9:20
M W F
GC 3417
001
O!Oe-1 Class Applied Music-Piano .
Henderson
7:30-8:20
M W F
GC 3404
001
010f-1 Class Applied Music-Voice
001
10:30-ll :20 M W F
GC 3406 Breidenthal
105c-4 Theory of Music .
8:30-9:20
MTuWThF
GC 3305
Pi val
001
!40c thru r-2 or 4 Private Applied Music .
001
Arranged
Staff
c. Cello
k. Piano
d. String Bass
I. French Horn
m. Trumpet
e. Flute
g. Clarinet
n. Trombone
h. Bassoon
p. Baritone
i. Saxophone
q. Voice
j. P ercussion
r. Organ
141-0 Recital Class .
001
10:30-11:20
Tu
GC 3417
Blakely
240c thru r-2 to 4 Private Applied Music (See Music 140 above )
001
Arranged
Staff
300- 3 Music Education-Elementary .
Tulloss
001
*9:30-10 :20
MTuWTh
GC 3406
301a-3 Music Education-Elementary ............ .
Tulloss
001
*9:30-10 :20
MTuWTh
GC 3406
301b-3 Music Education-Junior High
001
*12:30-1:20
MTu\VTh
J oseph
GC 3406
340c thru r-2 or 4 Private Applied Music (See Music 140 above )
Staff
Arranged
001
355b-1 Chamber Music Ensembles-Woodwinds ................... ..
8:30-10:20
Tu
GC 3417
Mellott
001
9:30-10:20
Th
GC 3417
Mellott
HOc thru r-2 or 4 Private Applied Music (See Music 140 above)
001

"'Arranged (For graduate stude nts only)

451-3 The Teaching of General Classroom Music
001
***8:00-ll:OO
MTuWTh
GC 1410
MTuWTh
I :00-4:00
455-4 Elementary Music Education Workshop
001
***8 :00-11:00
MTuWTh

Joseph,
Tulloss

GC 1410

GC 1410
Joseph,
Tulloss
I :00-4:00
MTuWTh
GC 1410
481-2 to 6 Readings in Music Theory ......
001
• Arranged
Staff
482-2 to 6 Readings in Music History-Literature
001
*Arranged
Joseph
483-2 to 6 Readings in Music Education ......
Blakely
001
*Arranged
501-3 Introduction to Graduate Study in Music ................ ..
001
* 8:30-9:20
MTu WTh
GC 3406
Blakely
540c thru r-2 or 4 Private Applied Music (See Music 140 above) ....
001
*Arranged
Staff
553b-3 Seminar in Materials and Techniques-Instrumental ..
001
* 9:30-10:20
MTuWTh
GC 3305
Mellott
*8-weeks course

***4·weeks workshop (June 20-July 14)

�....
20

MUSIC ( MUS )

Course No.-Ho urs Descriptive T itle
Edw. E. St. Lou i ~
Time

·· ····n~;~---

560--3 Seminar in Music Education
001
*10:30--ll :20 MTuWTh
566--1 Instrumental Ensemble (By audition)
001
*8:30--10 :20
Tu
• 9 :30--10: 20
Th
567- 1 Vocal Ensemble (By audition)
*
11
:30--12:20
M
W
F
001
599-6 Thesis
*Arranged
001

NURSING
210--2
355-4
363c-8
(To

375-8
381-3
382-6
(To

·· ··············· r~~-t~~~t-~·;

GC 3305

Joseph,
Tulloss

GC 3417
GC 3417

Mellott
Mellott

GC 3417

Van Camp
Blakely

(NURS )

Normal Nutrition
401
3:00--4:50
ESL 221
M
Lutz
Backgrounds and Trends in Nursing .
401
* 2 :30--4:00
M
ESL 220
Staff
* 2:30--3:20
TuWTh
ESL 220
Staff
Medical-Surgical Nursing
be taken concurrently with 382-6)
8:00--10 :20
ThF
ESL 220
Lect
Tayrien
(lst half quarter)
MTuW
Hospital Tayrien, Zich
Lab 401 7:00-3:00
Public Health Nursing
........................ ....... .
401
8:30--12 :30
MTuW
Agency
Burton
1:00--4:30
MTu
Agency
Burton
Principles and Methods of Teaching in Nursing ............... ...
401
*12:30--1 :20
MTuWTh
ESL 220
Parker
Development of Leadership in Nursing .
be taken concurren tly with 363c-8)
Lect
10:30--ll :50
ThF
ESL 220
Zich
(2nd half qua rter)
Lab 401 7:00--3 :30
MTu W
Hospital
Zich,
Tayrien

PH I L 0 S 0 PH Y
200-4
001
240-4
001
355-4
001
484b-4
001

· · · · · ····pi~~~

(PHIL)

Types of Philosophy: An Introduction
10 :30--11: 20 MTuWTh
Staff
GC 2306
Ethics .
12:30--1:20
MTuWTh
GC 3316
Staff
Philosophy of Education ..... ................. .
* 12 :30--1 :20
MTuWThF
GC 2410
Staff
History of Western Political Theories (Same as Govt 484b) .
*11:30--12:20 MTuWThF
GC 0409
Staff

PHYSICAL ED U CAT I 0 N

(PE)

350-4

Methods and Materials for Teaching Physical Education in
the Elementary School
001
*8:30--9:20
MTuWThF
GC 0304
Bowman
401
*11:30--12: 20 MTuWThF
Moehn
ESL 009 &amp;
ESL 215
420-4 Physiological Effects of Motor Activity
001
* 7:30--8:20
MTu WThF
GC 2307
Klein
501-4 Curriculum in Physical Education .................. .
001
* 10:30--11 :20 MTu WThF
GC 3313
Bowman
509-4 Supervision of Health and Physical Education ...
001
*9:30--10 :20
MTuWThF
GC 3313
Spear

PHYSICS

(PHYS)

211b-5 University Physics
M W F
9:30--10:20
001
Tu
9:30--11:20
Th
9:30--11:20
300-5 University Physics IV ........... .
001
10:30--ll :20 M W F
10 :30--12 :20
Th
10:30--12:20
Tu
404-3 Introduction to Statistical Mechanics
E001
8 :20--9 :35
M W
*8-weeks course

SL 0226
SL 0226
SL 1217

Sanders
Sanders
Sanders

SL 0226
SL 0226
SL 1217

..................
Boedeker
Boedeker
Boedeker

SL 0226

Walford

�SUMMER

P H YS ICS ( PHYS )

435-3 Plasma Physics ... . .............................. ..
E001
6: 20-7:35
l\1 \V

PH Y S I 0 L 0 G Y

SL 0226

Hakeem

SL 3211
SL 3211

Ratzlaff
Ratzlaff

(PHSL )

209-4 Principles of Physiology .
Lect
10:30-11:20
Lab001
12 :30-1:45
300-4 Human Anatomy .
Lect
10:30-11 :20
Lab 001
12:30-1:45

PSYCH 0 L 0 G Y

2/

l\1
Tu

w

l\1

w
Tu

F

Th
Th

..................

F

SL 3225
SL 3210

N. Parker
N. Parker

(PSYC)

211a-4 Principles and Methods of Psychology .
001
8 :30-9:20
MTuWTh
SL 2212
Staff
211b-4 Principles and Methods of Psychology
401
8 :30-9:20
MTuWTh
Eddowes
ESL 204
301-4 Child Psychology .
001
10:30-11:20 MTuWTh
GC 0314
Staff
401
* 10 :30-11:20
MTuWThF
ESL 104
Eddowes
303-4 Adolescent Psychology .
001
* 11 :30-12 :20 MTuWThF
GC 0411
Starr
307-4 Social Psychology ................................ ... .
001
• 9 :30-10:20
MTu \VThF
GC 0309
Engbretson
311-4 Experimental Psychology: Learning ...
001
* 12 :30-1:20
MTuWThF
SL 2212
Ferguson
421-4 Psychological T ests and Measurements ..... .
001
12:30- 1:20
MTuWTh
GC 0411
Harris
431-4 Psychopathology
.......................... .
O'Brien
001
* 11: 30-12:20
MTuWThF
GC 0314
432-4 Mental Hygiene (Meets with Guid 412 ) .,
001
*7:30-8 :20
MTuWThF
GC 3302
Staff
401
• 6:20-8:30
Tu Th
ESL 221
Staff
440-4 Theories of Personality
....................... .
001
* 1:30-2:20
MTuWThF
GC 3302
Staff
465-4 Group Dynamics and Individual Behavior ........................ .
001
* 11:30-12 :20
MTuWThF
GC 3315
McMahon
490- 1 to 8 Independent Research and Projects .............. .. ... .
001
Arranged
Ferguson
002
Arranged
Eddowes

S0 CI0 L0 GY

(SOC )

301-4 Principles of Sociology .................. ... ...................... .
001
8:30-9:20
MTuWTh
GC 2410
302- 4 Contemporary Social Problems .
.................... .
001
2:30-3:20
MTu \VTh
GC 2410
E401
6:20-8: 10
l\1 w
ESL 106
340-4 The Family ........................................................... .
001
12:30-1:20
MTu\VTh
GC 2403
374-4 Sociology of Education .
001
10:30-11:20 MTuWTh
GC 2403
375-4 Social Work as a Social Institution ............................... .
001
11 :30-12 :20 MTuWTh
GC 2403
484-4 Survey Course in Marriage Counseling ...... .
E001
t6:00-10 :00
MTuWTh
GC 0408

SPEECH CORRECTION

More
Irvine
Irvine

Taylor
More

Irvine

Taylor

(SPC)

200-4 Phonetics ............................ ............. .
8:30-9:20
St. Onge
001
MTu\VTh
GC 2304
319- 4 Stuttering
.... ............. ......
001
• 12:30-1 :20
MTu WThF
GC 2304
St. On ge
428-4 Speech Correction for the Classroom Teacher (Same as Sp E 428 )
001
*9:30-10 :20
MTuWThF
GC 2304
White

TH E ATE R

(THEA )

410- 3 Children's Theater .
001
*12 :30-2 :40
*8-weeks course
t Meets June 16 through July 1

Tu

Th

GC 3313

Pritner

���Southern Illinois University Bulletin
Edwardsville, Illinois 62025
Return Requested

Second Class Postage Paid at
Carbondale, Dlinois

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