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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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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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SouthlNestern Illinois Residence Centers
'

Southern Illinois University

FACULTV

NEWS

BULLETIN

/-:;0

r&lt;::~~

f''
(... -·- I

~~;\.
I? ~. : . ~:~}

~r

�FEBRUA RY ~

Vo L.

I960

FACU L T Y

NEWS

Southern Illinois University
SOUTHWESTERN ILLINOIS CAMPUS

SWICSIU CREDIT UNION
The Southwestern Illinois Campus Credit
Union began operation officially February 1.
Its initial organizational meeting of incorporators was held Janaar.y 22. Officers
elected were: HARRY H. SMITH, president;
S. D. LOVELL, vice president; ROBERT
McDANIEL, secretary; and JOE R. SMALL,
treasurer. Members of the Credit Committee
are JOE R. SMALL, chairman; JAMES D. TURNER,
FLORENCE FANNING; MORRIS CARR and LLOYD
HUBERT, advisors. This committee must approve all loans made by the credit union.
The Supervisory Committee examines the affairs of the credit union, including·its
books and accounts. This committee comprises BEVERLY KITCHING, chairman; MILTON
BYRD and NEDRA REAMES. To open an account
you must be a full-time employee of the
Southwestern Illinois Campus, SIU. An account may be opened for any member of the
immediate family--husband or wife, or children. An initial deposit of $5.00, plus
25¢ for membership fee is necessary. Thereafter you may make deposits whenever you
wish and in whatever even-dollar amounts
you choose. You must be a member of the
Credit Union to borrow money. Loan applications are available at the Alton and East
St. Louis business offices. All loans are
covered by insurance. Should you borrow
money and die before the loan is fully paid,
the insurance company will pay the balance.
Temporary and permanent disability protection is included. If you should have an outstanding loan and become permanently or
temporarily disabled for a period of 90 days
or more, the insurance company will make
payments until you are no longer disabled.
Illinois law prohibits any member of the
Board of Directors to borrow money in excess
of his deposits and for any other member
the loan cannot exceed ten per cent of the
Credit Union's net assets. The Credit Union
is available for loans immediately in the

III~

No .5

BULLE T IN
Mildred Arnold, Editor
Fangenroth Road
Edwardsville, Illinois

amount of $125, and if a faculty or staff
member desires more, it can be arranged. For
further information concerning SWICSIU, call
Mr. Small at Ext. 44, East St. Louis.

FILL SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS
H. BRUCE BRUBAKER took part in the Sunday
morning church services at St. John's
Methodist Church, Edwardsville, January 31.
It was Pioneer Sunday--Looking into the
Future. Brubaker's subject was "Looking
Into the Future at Education." Mr. Brubaker
is assistant to the vice president for institutional research and professor of education.
On January 25 GUNTER REMMLING, assistant
professor of sociology at Alton, spoke to
the East Alton Parent-Teachers Association
on "Empire to Republic: Half a Century of
Social Change in Germany."
KURT GLASER, lecturer in government at Alton,
and DIMITER WASSEN, associate professor of
economics and business management at Alton,
led a forum on Communism January 29 at the
meeting of the American Association of University Women in Wood River. Glaser spoke
February 7 to a breakfast meeting of the
Men's Club of the Godfrey Methodist Church.
His talk concerned Communism and "ways of
dealing with it."
DONALD TAYLOR, EUGENE GRAVES and THOMAS EVANS
will participate in a panel discussion at the
Emge School, Belleville, March 4 on "Parental
Delinquency."
Alton's Evening College supervisor, ROBERT
DUNCAN, appeared on a panel before the American Society of Training Directors January 13.
The directors met at the Gatesworth Hotel in
St. Louis and heard Duncan and two Washington
University faculty members discuss "What the

�FEBRU A R Y_,

VoL. III_, No. 5

1960

F ACU L T Y

NEWS

Southern Illinois University
SOUTHWESTERN ILLINOIS CAMPUS

SWICSIU CREDIT UNION
The Southwestern Illinois Campus Credit
Union began operation officially February 1.
Its i~itial organizational meeting of incorporators was held January 22. Officers
elected were: HARRY H. SMITH, president;
S. D. LOVELL, vice president; ROBERT
McDANIEL, secretary; and JOE R. SMALL,
treasurer. Members of the Credit Committee
are JOE R. SMALL, chairman; JAMES D. TURNER,
FLORENCE FANNING; MORRIS CARR and LLOYD
HUBERT, advisors. This committee must approve all loans made by the credit union.
The Supervisory Committee examines the affairs of the credit union, including·its
books and accounts. This committee comprises BEVERLY KITCHING, chairman; MILTON
BYRD and NEDRA REAMES. To open an account
you must be a full-time employee of the
Southwestern Illinois Campus, SIU. An account may be opened for any member of the
immediate family--husband or wife, or chil•
dren. An initial deposit of $5.00, plus
25¢ for membership fee is necessary. Thereafter you may make deposits whenever you
wish and in whatever even-dollar amounts
you choose. You must be a member of the
Credit Union to borrow money. Loan applications are available at the Alton and East
St . Louis business offices. All loans are
covered by insurance. Should you borrow
money and die before the loan is fully paid,
the insurance company will pay the balance.
Temporary and permanent disability protection is included. If you should have an outstanding loan and become permanently or
temporarily disabled for a period of 90 days
or more, the insurance company will make
payments until you are no longer disabled.
Illinois law prohibits any member of the
Board of Directors to borrow money in excess
of his deposits and for any other member
the loan cannot exceed ten per cent of the
Credit Union's net assets. The Credit Union
is available for loans immediately in the

BULLE T IN
Mildred Arnold, Editor
Fangenroth Road
Edwardsville, Illinois

amount of $125, and if a faculty or staff
member desires more, it can be arranged. For
further information concerning SWICSIU, call
Mr. Small at Ext. 44, East St. Louis.

FILL SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS
H. BRUCE BRUBAKER took part in the Sunday
morning church services at St. John's
Methodist Church, Edwardsville, January 31.
It was Pioneer Sunday--Looking into the
Future. Brubaker's subject was "Looking
Into the Future at Education." Mr. Brubaker
is assistant to the vice president for institutional research and professor of education.
On January 25 GUNTER REMMLING, assistant
professor of sociology at Alton, spoke to
the East Alton Parent-Teachers Association
on "Empire to Republic: Half a Century of
Social Change in Germany."
KURT GLASER, lecturer in government at Alton.
and DIMITER WASSEN, associate professor of
economics and business management at Alton,
led a forum on Communism January 29 at the
meeting of the American Association of University Women in Wood River. Glaser spoke
February 7 to a breakfast meeting of the
Men's . Club of the Godfrey Methodist Church.
His talk concerned Communism and "ways of
dealing with it."
DONALD TAYLOR, EUGENE GRAVES and THOMAS EVANS
will participate in a panel discussion at the
Emge School, Belleville, March 4 on "Parental
Delinquency."
Alton's Evening College supervisor, ROBERT
DUNCAN, appeared on a panel before the American Society of Training Directors January 13.
The directors met at the Gatesworth Hotel in
St. Louis and heard Duncan and two Washington
University faculty members discuss 11 What the

�- 2 -

Universities Can Do for the Busy Training
Director." In reporting this information,
E. R. CASSTEVENS, supervisor of the Industrial and Technical Program, said "Bob was
a big success."
JOHN J. GLYNN, director of the Alt~n center,
addressed a group of National Honor Society
students January 28 at Civic Memorial High
School, Bethalto.

his wife, Frina, were heard February 11 in
a program of music for one piano, four hands,
at the Fosterburg Elementary School. Works
performed included pieces by Schubert, Mozart,
Grieg and Brahms. On February 25 they will
appear as featured soloists at the Collinsville High School band concert.
BAND GIVES FIRST CONCERT

The Concert Band of SWIC gave its first
concert February 18 in the Chapel Auditorium
of the Alton Center. Conducted by C. DALE
FJERSTAD, the band featured Leonard Smith,
nationally known cornetist, as soloist.
A cornet-trumpet clinic was held that afterWINSLOW SHEA spoke February 10 at the
noon. A number of instrumental teachers and
Athenaeum on Albert Camus and Existentialism. their students from the area attended.
Shea is instructor of philosophy at the Alton
Center.
ARTICLE TO APPEAR IN JOURNAL
"I Used to Think I Knew I Knew" was the
Last month ASSEN KRESTEFF received the
title of H. H. Smith's talk January 26 at
following note: "Thanks very much for sendthe promotion exercises of Rock Junior High
School, East St. Louis. The exercises were
ing along your article (10,000 words) enheld in the auditorium of the East St. Louis titled "Musica Sonora and Musica Disciplina"
Center where Smith is associate professor of which I have just read with a great deal of
interest. This is an excellent article and
education.
I shall want to use it in the Journal of
ROBERT STEINKELLNER spoke to the Association Research in Music Education . . . I shall do
for Childhood Education at the Franklin
my best to get it in the earliest possible
School, Belleville, on February 3.
This
issue since we have nothing else similar on
assistant professor of elementary education
any kind of topic . . . " This letter was
at East St. Louis chose "Preparing Our Stusigned by Allen P. Britton, chairman of the
dents for Brotherhood Week" for his topic.
journal's editorial board. Kresteff is lecSteinkellner is serving this year as head
turer in foreign languages and music at East
of the Heart Association's collection of
St. Louis.
funds in Collinsville.
On February 14 EVELYN T. BUDDEMEYER, art
instructor at Alton, discussed "The Art
Program for the Young Child" before the
Alton chapter of the American Association
of University Women.

•

HOWARD DAVIS, SWIC's director of student
affairs, spoke January 19 at the Horace Mann
School Mother's Club in Alton. His subject
was "What an Elementary Guidance Program
Should Be." On January _25 he spoke at the
North Junior High School (Alton) ParentTeacher Association meeting on vocational
education. His topic was "Look, Ma, No
Hands."
BOLDTS GIVE PROGRAM
KENWYN BOLDT, Alton piano instructor, and

DRIFTWOOD FIRE
(Reprinted from January 24 Sunday edition of
the St. Louis POST-DISPATCH)
JOHN KNOEPFLE of Edwardsville bases many of
his river poems on a series of tape recordings
he has made of the recollections of rivermen
who go back to the days of the sidewheel
packets. His recordings are being prepared
for deposit in the Cincinnati Public Library's
Inland Rivers Department. Mr. Knoepfle, who
was born in 1923, is a graduate student at
St. Louis University and lecturer in English

�- 3 -

at Southern Illinois University's East St.
Louis Residence Center. His verses have
appeared in The Yale Review and Poetry,
among other publications. Fleur de Lis,
student magazine edited and published by
the Writers' Institute of St. Louis University, presents five of his river poems in
i .ts current issue, one of them being "Driftwood Fire."
I breathe before morning some driftwood
into fire. The bank is dry now
after late spring's raise, and the river
slips a princely darkness. His silence
needs . no counsel. My glance levels
over these humming sticks an unsought
dread no time shapes lovely as mist
congeals itself to fear and stranger,
though he carries no more than jugs
his shoulders beam an a x is for.
He'll spend his morning after cat,
wrapped in his still world drifting
where he has no place, his river bobbed
with all his jugs, constellations
he thinks positioned worth his while.
My fire expands a bubble in air
while I define myself like one
who wakes to pain inside his pearl,
some digger great with tunnels whose art
cracked under a universe of river.
I ought to shout that fisher here
to warm himself and weatherwise
the dawn, and for his part I know
some friendly itch to share these coals
catches his disappointed sleeve.

•

But he's united stat es and ha s
a hand in pocket want and so
am I. We can have no place.
He has his dark and I my light,
and neither one of us are kings.

small craftsman experi enc e d during the Industrial Revolution of the 18th and 19th
centuries. Baker is associate professor of
government on the Alton Campus.
FRED W. ZURHEIDE, instructor of physics at
Alton, is co-author of an article which
appeared in a recent issue of ~n Italian
scientific journal , Il Nuovo Cimento (New
Experiments). Written in collaboration with
Professor 0. B. Young, director of Atomic
and Capacitor Resea rch for SIU (Carbondale),
the article records the results of a study
the two . made entitled "Primary Heavy Cosmic
Ra ys Near the Geomagnetic Equator."
"Writing for the Professional Journals" is
the name of an article written by ETHEL HALE.
It app ears in the February issue of The
Balance Sh e et , a periodical for teachers in
business and s e cret a rial science. Miss Hale
is a lecturer in secretarial science and
business education at Alton.

TRIBUNE AND TIME S QUOTE MEREDITH
CAMERON W. MEREDITH's paper presented to the
American Association for the Advancement of
Science which met in Chicago during the
Christmas holidays was quoted in the Sunday
Chica go Tribune and the Sunday New York Times
January 3 in a special from Walter Sullivan.
". . . Cameron W. Meredith of Southern Illinois University advocat e d self-re s t ra ine d
silence on the part of the t ea cher or parent
as the best way to foster an atmosphere of
good behavior. He said that if the teacher
showed he coul d n e ither be frightened nor
pr ovoked, he would soon win the respect .
of his student . This produced skepticism
from teachers in schools where gangs and
violence are a problem. Dr. Meredith replied that his procedure required courage
and a sympathetic principal. It was better,
he said, than the conversion of every teacher
into a 'policeman.'"

ARTICLES PUBLISHED
The New Leader will soon carry an article
by RICHARD C. BAKER entitled "The Small
Farmer: Another Vanishing American."
Baker's thesis is that the small farmer of
today is in the same dying stage which the

ON SELECTION COMMITTEE
DEAN WILLIAM T. GOING served on the Senior
Selection Committee for the Man of the Year,
sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce

�- 4 -

•·

of St. Louis. The committee was chaired by
James Hickok, president of the First National Bank; Dean Going represented the field
of education in the Greater St. Louis area.
Presentation of the award to F. William
Human, mayor of Clayton, was made at the
Statler ballroom, where forty years ago to
the day the national organization of the
Junior Chamber was founded. Governor
William G. Stratton of Illinois was the
principal speaker.
ON JOHNSON SOCIETY PROGRAM
NICHOLAS JOOST has been invited to appear
on the program of the Johnson Society of
the Great Lakes Region, April 30, with such
scholars as Irvin Ehoenpreis and James
Clifford. The society will meet at John
Carroll University in Cleveland. Joost's
paper is entitled "Legitimism versus Toryism." It will deal with the question of
Jacobitism and Toryism as seen in the
writings of Dryden, Swift, Pope, and Samuel
Johnson. Joost is associate professor of
English at Alton.
CONDUCTED WORKSHOP
On January 25 CATHERINE MILOVICH conducted
a mid-term art workshop for approximately
40 primary teachers of the Edwardsville
Community Schools at their Junior High
building. Experiences were provided in
finger paint, tempera paint, potato printing
and texture constructions with tactile materials. At the same time, EVELYN T.
BUDDEMEYER of the Alton staff conducted a
similar workshop for the intermediate level.
Mrs. Milovich is assistant professor of art
at East St. Louis.

•

CLIFTON CORNWELL, assistant professor of
speech at East St. Louis, was in Chicago
January 28 to attend the Midwest Council
on Airborne Television Instruction which
was held at the Windermere Hotel.
H. BRUCE BRUBAKER was official representative
of SWIC at the annual meeting of the American
Association of School Administrators held
February 13-17 at Atlantic City. On February
15 SIU had an open house from four to six
p.m. at the Traymore Hotel. Nearly 150 persons attended, Brubaker reported, including
Gordon Dodds , superintendent of the Edwardsville schools, and George Wilkins, superintendent of public instruction for the state
of Illinois, and Mrs. Wilkins. Dodds and
Wilkins are alumni of SIU. Members of AASA
heard some topnotch speakers, Brubaker said,
among them Governor Rockfeller of New York
and Secretary of Agriculture Benson.
HYMAN FRANKEL read a paper at the Conference
of the Council on Social Work Education held
recently in Oklahoma City.
In addition to
reading the paper, he took part in a panel
on workshop programs. Frankel, assistant
professor of sociology at Alton, has been
named to the board of directors of the
Illinois Children's Home and Aid Society.
Also attending the Council on Social Work
Education Conference was DONALD TAYLOR,
associate professor of sociology, East St.
Louis.

ATTENDED CONFERENCES

Representing SWIC at a joint meeting in
Chicago of the American Mathematical Society,
the Mathematical Association of America, the
Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, and the National Council of Teachers
of Mathematics were ERIC STURLEY, LYMAN
HOLDEN and ARNOLD SEIKEN from Alton, and
KERMIT CLEMANS and CLELLIE OURSLER from
East St. Louis. The meeting was held in
late January.

MARY MARGARET BRADY, associate professor of
secretarial science and business education
at Alton, attended the annual meeting of
the National Association for Business Teacher Education which was held in Chicago
February ll-13. Miss Brady served on a
committee which discussed problems of
curriculum.

WILLIAM C. SHAW, professor of physics at
East St. Louis, was in New York January
27-30 attending the joint meetings of the
American Physical Society and the American
Association of Physics Teachers. He reports
an interesting and worthwhile trip and
commented on the demonstration of new equipment, particularly that of Russia and other

�- 5 -

,

foreign countries. · It is much cheaper ,
he said. Mr. Shaw's specialty is solid
state physics. At the meetings he met a
number of people with whom he had worked
in AEC and the Midwest Research Institute.

Kresge Company, a representative, Mr. Zane,
will be on the Alton campus February 24 from
9:00 to 12:00.

WITH DEEPE ST SYMPATHY
STUDY MADE BY SHOWERS
NORMAN SHOWERS has completed a study on "An
Investigation of Guidance Service at the
Alton Center of the Southwestern Illinois
Campus." Copies of the study were presented
to students in a graduate guidance class at
Washington University. Showers is instructor of physical education for men at Alton.

We were all sorry to learn of the death of
MARION TAYLOR's mother. Mrs. Taylor, assistant professor of English at Alton, wrote,
"On behalf of my husband, my son, and me, I
wish to thank the faculty for the beautiful
basket of flowers sent to my mother's funeral in Iowa City, Iowa. We are all deeply
grateful. "
FROM DIEKROEGER

ON TV FORUM
Representing the University February 1 on
The Changing World television series were
JOHN J. GLYNN and WALTER BLACKLEDGE. ROBERT
DUNCAN was moderator. Lloyd McBride, subdistrict director of Illinois for the United
Steel Workers, and J. S. Kovic, industrial
relations manager for the East Alton plant
of the Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation ,
spoke for industry and labor in discussing
problems of modern collective bargaining.
The University participants are all members
of the Alton staff. Glynn is director;
Blackledge is professor of business management, and Duncan is supervisor of the Evening College. This was the eighth program
of the series presented on KETC-9, St.Louis,
the first and third Monday evenings at nine
o'clock.
HOTEL DISCOUNT AVAILABLE

•
•

University faculty members may take advantage of a low-rate plan offered by a national hotel chain. The guest card arrangement
allows one to charge rooms, meals, car
rental, and other services. Check with
your director for details .
EMPLOYMENT INTERVIEW
If your students are interested in the
management trainee program of the S. S.

The gymnasium at East St. Louis will be open
for faculty activity participation on Fridays
from 10:00 to 11:30 a.m . and from 1:00 to
5:00 p.m., according to an announcement by
JAMES DIEKROEGER, instructor of physical
education for men.
FINER FILMS
"The Seven Deadly Sins" will be shown Friday,
February 26, at 3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. at
the East St. Louis Center. The film, directed
in part by Roberto Rossellini, is a series
of seven short stories, each centered about
one of the so-called mortal frailties. The
film stars Michele Morgan, Francoise Rosy,
Viviane Romance and Henry Vidal. Members
of the Finer Films Group view and discuss
distinctive foreign and domestic awardwinning motion pictures of the past and pre-.
sent.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE NEWS
More than 200 persons attended the modern
language festival February 13 at the Alton
Center. Sponsored by the campus Deutschklub,
the program featured selections from French,
German , Russian and Spanish languages. High
school students from Alton and Hardin, as
well as university students from the Alton
Center, sang and took part in dances, dialogues and readings in the four languages.

�- 6 -

•

HERROLD HEADLEY, choral director for SHIC,
sang in the three Western European languages.
RUTH KILCHENMANN was in charge of festival
arrangements .
RUTH KILCHENMANN, associate professor of
German at ' Alton, has advised us that another
FLES project has been inaugurateu, this one
in Washington School, Alton. Two of her
advanced students are teaching in the second
grade. A very successful program was started in South Roxana last month in grades one
to six.

instructional program. January 18 Taliana
participated in a program with the Reverend
Reuben Baerwald, president of the Madison
County Mental Health Society. The two talked
to the Alton Rotary Club on mental health at
a meeting in the Stratford Hotel. On February ll he talked to the Mother's Club of
the Fosterburg Elementary School on the topic
of "Child Behavior Traits of the Six to
Twelve Age Group." Taliana is assistant
professor of guidance at Alton.

PLAN CONFERENCE
On March 5 German students of the area high
schools will meet in Room 300 of th e Administration Building, Alton, for the first
contest of the American Association of
Teachers of German. Between 30 and 40 students will compete in this national contest,
said Mrs. Kilchenmann, who will supervise
the test. First prize is six weeks in Germany. Other prizes will be given to stimulate interest in foreign languages.

A planning conference was held February 12
in Edwardsville to lay groundwork for a
spring meeting of all area guidance personnel.
Those participating '"ere H. H. SMITH, WILLIAM
BANAGHAN and LAWRENCE TALIANA, chairman. The
three are on the Alton staff . Smith is associate professor of education; Banaghan
and Taliana are assistant professors of
guidance.

READING ASSOCIATION

ALTON DEBATE TEAM

The International Reading Association will
meet March 4 at the East St. Louis Center.

Coached by ROBERT HAWKINS, assistant professor of sp eec h at Alton, the debate team
at that center entered its first intercollegiate competition this month in a tournament at P~: ·rdue . University in West Lafayette,
Indiana. On February 16 the team met Principia College in a practice session, and on
February 26 and 27 it will engage in a tournament at DeKalb. The question debated is:
Resolved that the Congress should be given
th e power to reverse decisions of the Supreme
Court.

Dr .

St er l Artley, professor of ed ucati on at

Missouri University, will speak on "Skills
are Not Enough!" Artley is director of the
Reading Clinic at Missouri University and
current president of the International
Reading Association. He is one of the
major authors of the Scott-Foresman Basal
Reader Series.
TALIANA ON PROGRAMS

•
•

LAWRENCE E. TALIANA addressed the Edwardsville Junior High School faculty January 25
at its mid-term workshop on "Methods of Integrating the Formal Guidance Program with
the Regular Junior High School Program." On
January 15 hE met with the School Sisters of
Notre Dame, Notre Dame College, St. Louis,
in a meeting designed to set up a testing
program for the college's freshmen, sophomore and senior classes. The school has
recently been designated dS a four-year
college and is planning an evaluat ion of its

FACULTY HOMEN MEET
The SW IC-SIU Faculty Women's Club held a
luncheon at the Edwardsville Gun Club on
February 18. Chairman of this event was
MRS. GENE TURNER. Her committee members
included MRS . C. E. PEEBLES, MRS. EUGENE
HERSCHER, MRS . DANIEL BOSSE, MRS. DALE
FJERSTAD, MRS. ROBERT HAWKINS and MRS,
SVERRE SCHELDRUP. The March 17 meeting
will be a guest tea at the East Alton
Saving. &amp; Loan Company at 1:00 p.m.

�- 7 -

MRS. ALFRED KUENZLI will serve as chairman.

•

THE SYMPOSIUM
The newly-organized faculty club at the
East St. Louis Center has been named "The
Symposium." Located at 600 1/2 Tenth Street,
the club rooms are available for use by members and their spouses at any time. The
first party was held Saturday night, February 20. Members of the board of governors
include ROBERT ERICKSON (chairman), assistant professor of history; GERALD RUNKLE,
associate professor of philosophy; and PETER
SIMPSON, instructor of English. MARY MEGEE,
assistant professor of geography is treasurer.
S. D. LOVELL, who took the leadership in
forming "The Symposium" and who is unofficially recognized as "The Founder," says,
"This thing has tremendous possibilities."
CONDUCTS SUNDAY SERVICE
On February 21, D. E. WASSEN, associate
professor of economics and business management at Alton, conducted the Sunday service
at the Salem Presbyterian Church in Alton .

•

�el

•

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lo-LIHUj!)

UrJJVER:-i \'

LIBRARIES-CARBONDALE
RECE IVED

JANUARY uz1 ,

J.\1-t u 3 1863 VoL • 1 ,

1958

q
No .f1

C'Ol1PI LED lfONTHLY By ] N FOR J'IA T ION S'E R VIC JfJiUlSS'f!;ff'frH WE STER N iLLI NOIS
RESIDENCE OFFICE
SouTHERN ] LL INO IS UN !VER SI T Y, F OR T H E STAFF
11El1BERS OF THE R~SIDENCE CEN TERS~ T H E iVEWSLE T T ER IS H A DE POSSIBLE BY THE COOPERA TION OF ST AFF HEHBERS WHO H A VE CO N T RI BUTED
NEWS

ITE!1S.

F A C' U L T Y

N E 1:1 S L E T T E R

Ne-v1 Homen's Club

Carmazelle Davis, Alton, Ha s e lee ted pres i dent o f the ne~v Re s idence Centers'
Faculty Homen'D Club January 23.
.
.
Betty Spahn, Scott Air Force Ba se, Has named v1ce -pres1dent, _and Geneva
Peebles, Alton, is tre a surer.
Betty Sturley, Ali:on, \·Jill be program cha irman, and Lucy NcAneny., Alton ,
· will he in charge of publicity.
Named directors at large are Rui: h Ba iley, Bellevi l l e, and No rma. Sho-v1ers, Alton.
on January 27 the club's executives met a t the home of Geneva Peebles to
i~ormulatc plans for the year.
Mary Margaret Brady, secretarial science, Alton, is co-author of a textbook
for calculating machine instruction scheduled for publication this month .
Dr. Brady, co-author Hith Peter AgneH, NeH York University, of the book
Advanced Key-driven Calculator Course, secured much of the material for it as a
part of her doctoral study, and organized it for teaching purposes from job analyses of work performed in offices on the key-driven calculator.
The book is being published by the SouthHestern Publishing Company.
A member of Shurtleff College's staff several years ago, Margaret Brady
came to Alton this year from Madison College, Harrisonburg, Virginia.
Board of Trustees Meeting in Alton
SIU's Board of Trustees toured the Alton campus yesterday before a morning
business session at Davis Lodge. The y met at lunch Hith t he executive committee
of the Southwestern Illinois Council f or Hi ghe r Education and held their afternoon
business session at the Alton Country Club.
Dean See reported that total student enrollment for all types of programs
shows a net increase of four per cent this quarter.
Full-time day student enrollment increased sligh tly more than four per cent.
With the enrollment of additional freshmen at mi d- t erm in a special accelerated
program at East St. Louis, the percentage o f i ncrease Hill be even greater.
Graduate student enrollment gains of slightly more than 11 per cent occurred
simultaneously with a net drop of 21 per cent in evening credit course enrollment.
Total student enrollment in credit cour ses showed a net decrease of two per
cent, but when the registrar computed the full-time equivalent, he found an increase
of five per cent in total instruction.
Adult _and technical student enrollment incre a sed 22 per cent, principally
because of an increase in "in-plant" and civil defense programs.

(more)

�- 2 -

Students Receive Financial Aid
More than 700 Residence Center students at Alton and East St. Louis receive
state or federal help with their education. Well over ~alf of th:se.are studen~s
who receive financial help only because they are attend1ng an Ill1no1s state un1versity. This makes 35 of them eligible for SIU Scholarship and Activity Awards,
156 for Illinois Military Scholarships, 65 for State Te .1 che: ~raining ~cholarships,
and 124 for university part-time employment. Veterans re~e1v1ng benef1ts number 318,
Roughly 40 per cent of the Residence Center students rece1ve help through these
sources.
Who's Who?
\.Ji th the addition of seven new faculty members for the \vinter quarter, the
regular full-time teaching staff of the Centers includes 24 doctorates (63 per cent);
Twenty persons hold two or more degrees from the same university. ··' ·
~
Midwestern universities account for most of the 103 degrees held by the 38
regular full-time staff members, but 13 of them are from Eastern universities,
including Harvard and Yale, and four are from universities south of the MasonDixon line. Thirteen of the faculty took at least one degree in a university
west of the Mississippi.
Two men hold three degrees in addition to their doctorates, and one holds
two bachelor's and two master's.
Only two staff members hold degrees from SIU, and these two hold two each.
Not included in the count are the Centers' degree-laden, non-teaching registrar and business managers.
David Bear, education, Alton, spoke at two PTA meetings this month, in
Edwardsville and Granite City.
On the 17th he addressed the PTA of Trinity Lutheran High School in Edwardsville
on the "Effects of Child Growth and Development on Curriculum Practices in the Elementary School."
Ten days later, as guest speaker at the Granite City Jr. High School PTA at
a meeting at Central School, he defined "A Good Education."
Rings Visit New York
Dr. and Mrs. Ring motored to Jamestown, New York, during the recent snow
storm. Mrs. Ring, who broke her arm before Christmas, does not hold even a back
seat driver's license, and Dr. Ring was at the wheel the entire trip. They
reportedly reached Jamestown in less th~n three days.
Course for VIP' r.
Chels Bailey, Technical and Adult Education, Residence Office, and Joe Bird,
Management, Alton, have designed a course in top-level management for VIP's in
industry.
C?mprised o~ supervis?rs who report to no one lower than a vice-president
in the1r respect 1ve compan 1es, and selected because of the strategic positions
they hold, the group includes a company president.

(more)

�•

)) •

A

- 3 -

Dean See was guest speaker January 9 at a meeting of the Nitchell PTA in
Mitchell, Illinois.
John Schnabel, associate registrar, Alton and East St. Louis, will address
the Greene County Education Association at Eldred on Monday , February 3 on "An
Effective Public School Program as Interpreted by an Admis s ions Director."

nvo Hundred Miles for Bridge
Helen See, Ruth Bailey, and Betty Spahn drove to Carbondale one day last
week with the announced intention of carrying off some o f the 20 prizes offered
at the dessert-bridge of the Faculty Homen's Club at Carbondale. Nembers of
the delegation who could be reached at their homes have consistently dec114ed
to comment as to the success of the mission.
.... ·, .. .. .
.

· . ·~ .

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                    <text>South1Nestern Illinois Residence Centers
Southern Illinois University

�JANUARY,

1960

VoL.

F AC U L T Y

N E il S

Southern Illinois University
SOUTHWESTERN ILLINOIS CAMPUS

RECEIVES FULBRIGHT
MARION A. TAYLOR, assistant professor of
English (Alton), has received a Fulbright
grant to lecture in India at the University
of Jammu and Kashmir, located in Srinagar.
She will lecture in English and American
literature.
Mrs. Taylor says she would welcome the donation of any reference books, text books,
novels, plays, essays and poetry books in
either of these fields. As soon as she
arrives at the university she will need
Hawthorne's House of the Seven Gables,
Emerson's essays and poems, Poe 1 s short
stories and poems. If you have books which
you would like to donate, contact Mrs.
Taylor. Her extension at the Alton center
is 66; her home telephone number is Clinton
9-2767.
There is more news about Mrs. Taylor. Two
of her one-act plays have recently been
accepted by the International One-Act Play
Theatre in London. They are entitled, "If
I Were a Cowboy" (a verse play for women
to give for children) and "A Friend of the
Fugitives" (a play about Harriet Beecher
Stowe). _Ber short story, "Upside Down,"
will appear in the February issue of TEENS
magazine. On December 19 she gave Christmas readings from two of her publications
at the Christmas party of the Fidelity
Class of the Nameoki Methodist Church,
Granite City. The party was held at the
home of Peggy Canham, a SWIG student.

B J L L

j_j'

III~-

No.4

T I N

Mildred Arnold, Editor
Fangenroth Road
Edwardsville, Illinois
election date has been set for Tuesday,
February 2. "Obviously this is a very important election," Brubaker said, "since
there is no hospital in the area. Good
schools and fine hospitals are important
in recruiting quality persons to join our
faculty."
The total assessed property valuation for
the communities of the area, according to
Brubaker, is approximately $67,000,000. The
limit on bonded indebtedness that may be
incurred is one and a-half per cent of the
assessed valuation. A proposed tax rate
has been developed on the assumption that
the maximum amount of money available
(approximately $1,000,000) will be needed
for the construction of a 65-bed hospital.
This proposed tax rate, which also would
provide for the operation of the hospital,
is .00188 (18.8¢ per $100 assessed value).
The tax on a property assessed at $10,000
would be $18.80. This means that for a
property owner the total tax would increase
only $18.80, Brubaker said. He urges members of the staff living in the area concerned to vote February 2 on this important
matter.
Brubaker joined the staff recently as professor of education and assistant to Vice
President See in charge of research. He
co.mes .to us from the University of Mississippi
where he was a professor of education and
director of the laboratory school.
EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION

..
APPOINTED TO HOSPITAL COMMITTEE
No sooner had H. B. BRUBAKER moved to
Edwardsville than he was appointed to the
Chamber of Commerce Hospital Committee which
is conducting a campaign to establish an
Edwardsville area hospital district. The

Information about the Credit Union for all
employees of the Southwestern Illinois Campus has been released by JOE R. SMALL, associate professor of business administration
at East St. louis. "In the past two years
the need for the establishment of an employees credit union has been increasingly

�- 2 -

apparent. This need became even more obvious as new staff members found the University could not loan money of any amount,
even in the guise of a salary advance, except when paychecks were late in arriving
or some such special situation. Consequently, the Falcon Investment Club created a
committee from its group to determine what
was necessary to establish such a credit
union. We are happy to announce that our
application to the State of Illinois for
the establishment of the Southwestern
Illinois Campus Employees Credit Union has
been approved, issued, and received. Some
further legal requirements must be completed before operations can be started.
However, all necessary arrangements should
be completed to permit initial operations
to begin on February 1, 1960. This Credit
Union is available to all full-time 'employees of this campus. The initial deposit
for one share is at a cost of $5, p ] us a
membership fee (payable only once) of $0.25.
Membership may be obtained at the business
offices at Alton for all employees at the
Alton Center or East St. Louis for all employees at the East St. Louis cente1. The
charter authorizes loans up to $200 on
unsecured notes; over $200 to $2000 on
secured notes, at interest rates of one
per cent per month on unpaid balances below
$1000, and one-half per cent on unpaid
balances over $1000. The dividend rate on
deposits, of course, is dependent upon the
earnings of the Credit Union, but after the
initial years of operations most credit
unions are able to pay dividends of five
to six per cent on all deposits . . . "
STAFF DIRECTORY CHANGES
Due to the installation of a new switchboard at the East St. louis center, extensions for its faculty and staff member s
are incorrectly listed in the new staff
directory. A supplement is being prepared
for the Southwestern Illinois Campus. If
you have any changes, SEND THEM AT ONCE TO
Mildred Arnold, Vice President's Office,
Fangenroth Road, Edwardsville. '

KIMBALL ARTICLE REPRINTED
"The Columbia Professor and the Book of
Mormon" by STANLEY KIMBALL recently reappeared in A Book of Mormon Treasury published by Bookcraft, Inc., Salt Lake City.
The article was published originally in
1954. Kimball is assistant professor of
history at Alton.
ERICKSON ARTICLE PUBLISHED
"The French Geodetic Expedition of 1735" is
the title of an article by ROBERT F. ERICKSON
which .was carried in the November issue of
the Quarterly Journal of the History of
Science and Technology of the Polish Academy of Sciences. Erickson is assistant professor of history at East St. Louis.

WARREN RECEIVES PROMOTION
EDWIN B. WARREN of the Alton music faculty
has been promoted to the rank of associate
professor. On Friday afternoon, January 15,
Warren presented the pre-symphony lecture
sponsored by the \~omen 1 s Association of the
St. louis Symphony Society. The lecture was
given in the Chase Club of the Chase Hotel
in St. louis.
NEW ARRIVALS
GUNTER REMMLING and his wife are the parents
of a daughter, Anita Fay, born December 19.
Remmling is assistant professor of sociology
at Alton. The W. WINSLOW SHEAS are the parents of Sean 0., also born on December 19.
Shea is instructor of philosophy at Alton.
BUSY ART INSTRUCTOR
EVELYN BUDDEMEYER (Alton) served as judge
January 9 of the First Annual Fine Arts Exhibition sponsored by M.A.C. Art Guild. The
exhibition was held from January 11 to 15 at
McDonnell Aircraft Corporation, St. louis.

�- 3 -

On January 20 Mrs. Buddemeyer will speak
to the members of the Anna D. Sparks Society
of the Unitarian Church in Alton on "Art-In the Life of a Child." On January 25 she
will help in the mid-term Art Workshop in
Edwardsville by conducting the section for
teachers of grades four through six.

Junior High School on January 5 and demonstrated FLES with four children "who have
never had a word of German." Her topic
was "Foreign Languages in the Elementary
School."
SERVED AS NODERATOR

TO ATTEND NEETINGS
NARY MARGARET BRADY will attend a meeting
of the Illinois Business Teacher Education
Committee in Springfield on January 22.
This committee is composed of represent a tives from the various Illinois universities
offering business teacher training. Niss
Brady is associate professor of secret ar i a l
science and business education at Alton.
FILL SPEAKING ENGAGENENTS
E. R. CASSTEVENS, supervisor of the Industrial and Technical Program, spoke January
6 to approximately 75 department heads,
engineers and supervisors at Owens-Illinois'
Godfrey plant. His subject was "Self Improvement Opportunities at Southern Illino i-s
University." On January 7 he discussed
"University-sponsored Industrial and Technical Programs" at the Ozark Personnel As sociation meeting held at Andrews Restaurant, Desloge, Missouri.

On January 13 BERTRAND BALL, instructor in
French at Alton, spoke to the Alton Hi gh
School students at a meeting of its French
Club. Ball spoke of his experiences as a
Fulbright Scholar in France during the
academic year 1955-56.

On January 5 R. H. STEINKELLNER, assistant
professor of education at East St. Louis,
served as moderator of a panel discussion,
"Shall Unit 10 (Collinsville) move to the
6-3-3 School Organization?" The discussion
took place in the Webster School auditorium
in Collinsville.

TO CONTINUE AS ASSOCIATE EDITOR
ALFRED E. KUENZLI has been invited to serve
for another two years as associate editor of
Conflict Resolution, a quarterly published
at the University of Michigan. The journal
is devoted to interdisciplinary research in
the field of international relations.
Kuenzli, associate professor of psychology
at Alton, has been invited by The Journal
of Individual Psychology to review a new
book by Narvin Farber entitled Naturalism i
and Subjectivism.

FILLING PULPITS
KENNETH F. ESTEY, lecturer in religious
education (Alton), has been supplying the
pulpits of the First Baptist Church of Hartford and Belleville and has been invited to
serve the First Baptist Church of Kemper.
On December 13 he completed nine months of
service as interim supply for the church in
Staunton.

OPENS FLES PROJECT
A new FLES project in South Roxana was
opened January 6 under the supervision of
RUTH KILCHENNANN, associate professor of
German at Alton. There are two classes of
35 and 40, Nrs. Kilchenmann reports, t aught
by one of her students after regular school
hours. Mrs. Kilchenmann spoke to the Parent
Teachers Association of the Edwardsville

WORLD AFFAIRS FORUN
The social studies division at Alton is
sponsoring a World Affairs Forum in the chapel auditorium on Monday evening, February 1,
at eight o'clock. The topic is "How We
Lost the War in Central Europe." HYMAN H.
FRANKEL, assistant professor of sociology,

�- 4
will be moderator. Participants include
KURT GLASER, lecturer in government; MELVIN
KAZECK, associate professor of geography;
STANLEY B. KIMBALL, assistant professor of
history; and DIMITER E. WASSEN, associate
professor of economics and business management. The forum is open to the public and
students and faculty are urged to attend.
REPRESENTATIVE SIMON SPEAKS
"Editing a Small-Town Newspaper" was the
topic discussed January 13 by Representative
Paul Simon. He spoke at a meeting of The
Athenaeum, Alton campus humanities org anization.
ELECTED TO BOARD
NICHOLAS T. JOOST, associate professor of
English at Alton, has been elected to the
board of Renascence, edited by John Pick.
Among the board members are such well-known
scholars as Barry Ulanov, James E. Tobin,
and Marshall McLuhan. The honor came to
Joost during his attendance at the Modern
Language Association's convention in Chicago. A recent ·essay, "A Century of Religious Verse," which appeared in the December 1959 issue of Delta Epsilon Sigma
Bulletin, is being reprinted in the magazine Perspectives.
ATTEND CONFERENCES
During the Christmas holidays a number of
our faculty members attended national conferences in Chicago.

I

Among those attending the Modern Language
Association Conference were MILTON BYRD,
assistant professor of English (East St.
Louis); ROBERT DUNCAN, associate professor
of English (Alton); NICHOLAS JOOST, associate professor of English (Alton); RUTH
KILCHENMANN, associate professor of German
(Alton); ASSEN KRESTEFF, lecturer in
foreign languages (East St. Louis); CHARLES
PARISH and MARION TAYLOR, both
associate professors of English (Alton);

~

and R. J. SPAHN, associate professor of
German (East St. Louj.s). Mrs. Kilchenmann
presented a paper in the German Section 5
(Modern German Literature) entitled "Traum
und Wirklichkeit in den Werken Friedrich
Schnacks." She was a ppointed area chairman of German FLES and also appointed supervisor and coordinator for the American
Association of German Teachers High School
contest of the area. She was in charge of
the organization of a new chapter of the
AATG including southern and central Illinois.
Joost took part in a symposium, "Satire and
the Modern Christian Temper. 11
Attending the annual convention of the
American Historical Association in Chicago
were RICHARD C. BAKER, STANLEY B. KIMBALL ,
HERBERT H. ROSENTHAL, associate professors
of history at Alton, and ROBERT F. ERICKSON,
assistant professor of history at East St.
Louis. The mee tin gs were held from December
28 to December 30 at the Conrad Hilton Hotel.
CAMERON W. MEREDITH, who is a Fellow in the
American Association for the Advancement of
Science, presented a paper at the annual
convention held in Chicago last month. It
was entitled "A Philosophy of Discipline
for a Democratic Atmosphere. 11 Meredith is
professor of psychology and special education at Alton.
Also attending the AAAS meetings held from
December 26 through December 30 were HOWARD
W. PFEIFER, lecturer in botany at the East
St. Louis Center, and GEORGE R. ARNOLD,
instructor in physics at that center. They
report hearing such speakers as Lee DuBridge,
president of California Institute of Technology; William H. Pickering, director of the
jet propulsion laboratory at Cal Tech; and
Wallace R. Brode, science advisor to the Department of State. wbile attending the meetings, Arnold renewed acquaintance with John
Mayor, formerly of the SIU staff at Carbondale and now director of education for the
AAAS and a supervisor of the Science Teaching Improvement Pro gram of the National
Science Foundation.
LEO COHEN, associate profes s or of economics
(East St. Louis), attended the annual meeting of the American Economi c Association in
Washington, D. C., December 28-30.

�I

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                    <text>1'958
GonPILED lfONTHLY BY ]NFORlfATION SERVICE, SouTHWESTERN ILLINOIS
RESIDENCE' OFFICE, SoUTHERN ]LLINOIS UNIVERSITY, FOR THE STAFF
11ElfBERS OF THE RESIDENCE CENTERS, THE NEWSLETTER IS !fADE POSSIBLE BY THE COOPERATION OF STAFF lfElfBERS WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED
NEWS ITE11S.

FACULTY

NE W SLETTER

Chelsea Bailey, Technical and Adult Education head, Sbut:me ste:.::n IllinoiS
Residence Office, addressed four groups within one fortnight recently.
He told two separate groups at the East St. Louis High School about the Land
of the Flying Carpet and Arabian Nights. He reported that the ·p·rincipal, Wirt
Downing, is to be congratulated on the school's excellent discipline, and that
the two audiences, totaling 1,700, were among the most attentive one could ask
for anywhere.
On June 2 he talked to the Central Illinois Master Plumbers Association in
Red Bud about Sanitary Conditions in Baghdad.
Three days later he told the Men's Club of Collinsville's First Presbyterian
Church about the People, Customs, and Religion of Iraq.

Kathryn VanHorn, Alton, was elected president of the Residence Centers'
Women's Club at a meeting held Saturday, Y~y 24, at Cahokia MOunds State Park.
----------------------------~------

Dean Harold W. See gave the commencement address at Southwestern High School
in Piasa, Macoupin County, on May 28.

----------------------------------Professor Joseph Bird, business management, Alton, spoke Sunday, May 18, at
the Upper Alton Baptist Church's annual dinner in honor of the children being graduated. Topic: "We Grow".
--------------------~--------------

Dr. Laurence McAneny, physics, Alton, was the commencement speaker June 2
at Pleasant Hill's Community High School.

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

�,
•

- 2 -

Thomas Evans, supervisor of student affairs, East St. Louis, talked to the
Future Teachers of America at the East St. Louis High School on Nay 19.

----------------------------------Mary Wyatt, nursing, Alton and East St. Louis, attended the educational
section of the American Nurses Association in Atlantic City June 9-13 as a delegate
from the State of Illinois.

----------------------------------David Eli Bear and John Joseph Glynn this month brought ·to 23 the number
of doctorates held by the 35 full-time instructional staff members . of. Southern
Illinois University teaching at the Alton Residence Center the Spring quarter.
(This is deliberately a tricky sentence. -- ed.)
Bear, former Alton public school administrator, who joined SIU' s staff last
year when it established a residence center on the campus of the former Shurtleff
College in Alton, received his doctorate this week at Washington University.
A specialict in elementary education, he came to Alton in 1949 after two
years' teaching in Wood River. This summer he will serve as -assistant director
of three SIU Horkshops at the Alton Center: Educational Utilization of Community
Resources, June 16-July 11; School Public Relations, July 14-31; and Advanced
Driver Education, August 18-28.
Glynn's Ph.D. is in business administration. Appearing before a doctoral
committee of St. Louis University professorsin business administration and
economics headed by Henry A. K. Junckerstorff, he outlined the advantages of
commercial arbitration of trade disputes -as opp_o·seii to expensive, time-consuming
litigation -- in resolving difficult trade controversies while preserving friendly
commercial relationships.
Business administration head of St. Louis University's Parks College before
joining the Alton Center staff, Glynn's appointment as evening college supervisor
was confirmed by the board of trustees this Spring.

----------------------------------SIU Faculty Publish Articles
"Should the Property Tax Remain as the Leading Source of Hunicipal Revenue?"
Unless certa~n objectionable exemptions are removed, "it appears l:tut a matter
of time until other tax sources supersede the traditional role of the tax on property as the chief source of municipal revenue," concludes Dr. s. D. L'ovell of
Belleville, Illinois, in the current issue of the Atlanta Economic Review.
A five-page tabulated description of the objectionable features of the property .
tax, the article is the second published discussion of the subject by Lovell since
he joined the SIU staff last September.
'
Articles by two other Southern Illinois University faculty members appear in
current issues of national publications.
\

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

�- 3 -

•
•

Dr. William Going, senior professor of Engl~sh at SIU:s Alton Residence ?ente:,
has an article on Oscar Wilde and l.Jilfrid Blunt 1n the Sprwg number of The V1ctonan
Newsletter, a publication of the Modern Language Association.
.
Two articles on Faulkner by Going, as well as a review of h~s on Welbourn Kelley,
appeared in winter issues of three other scholarly publications. His first popular
book
a posthumous edition of William March's Ninety-Nine Fables
was accepted
for publication recently by the University of Alaba~a Press.
Dr. Robert Duncan assistant professor of Engl1sh at the SIU center in Alton,
received notice yesterday (6/19/58) that his short story "The Lady is a Pilot" has
been accepted for publication.
The fourth of his short stories to be published this year, "The Lady is a Pilot"
is scheduled for the next issue of the magaz ine Air Facts.
MM

----------------------------------.... ' ...... .

· -~ -

SIU Centers Add to Staff
Seven new staff appointments to Southern Illinois University's Residence Centers
were confirmed today by the university board of trustees meeting in Carbondale.
Three men \..rere named as assistant professors: at Alton, Dr . . John I. Ades, English;
to serve both Alton and East St. Louis: Dr. Harold Headley, vocal music, and Dr.Howard
Nesbitt, men's physical education and supervisor of athletics.
~..ro men received instructorships, at Alton:
Kenneth Martin, secretarial science;
at East St. Louis: James L. Diekroeger, men's physical education.
Two staff members were transferred from the Carbondale campus: Dr. Herbert
H. Rosenthal, assistant professor of history, to Alton, and Miss Stephanie Conwell,
associate professor of nursing, to serve both Alton and East St. Louis.
' Five lecturers received appointments for 1958-59, and the board confirmed the
continuing appointments of 36 persons at present on the staff of the Centers. (On
"continuing appointments" are staff members with the rank of instructor or above.)
Executive Dean Harold W. See called attention to the fact that every staff
member who received a continuing appointment on coming to the Centers last September
has contracted to stay on, and only two of the staff members added in January have
signed contracts elsewhere.
Approximately 25 new positions have been created to help take care of this Fall's
increase in enrollment, See stated, and negotiations with candidates for most ofthese
are well under way. Posing the most serious problem are openings in chemistry, physics, ·
and psychology, he said.
·

----------------------------------New Titles for SIU Faculty
Ten staff members of Southern Illinois University's Residence Centers received
new titles or promotion in rank through hoard of trustees' action at Carbondale today
(6/24/58) •
.Dr. William T. Going, senior professor, Language and Fine Arts Divisio~was appointed Dean of Instruction for the Residence Centers in Alton. Belleville. and East
__ St. T,ouis.
Going, a former staff member of the University of Alabama, took his
master's degree at Duke and his doctorate at the University of Hichigan.
·.
His experience, primarily at the university level included a year's teaching
at West End High School in Birmingham.
'
(n:orc)

�•

·-

- 4 -

The educators of Southwestern Illinois heard some of his view~ on education a
month after his arrival in the area, when he addressed the St. Cla~r County Institute
of Junior and Senior High School Teachers on "Supermarket Cultur:. ,,
.
Since joining the SIU staff 1ast September, he h~s had publ~she~ two art~cles
on William Faulkner one on Wilfrid Blunt and Oscar W~lde, and a rev~ew of Welbourn
Kelley's Alabama Em;ire; a popular book -- a pos~hum~us edition o~ Wil~iam March's
Ninety-Nine Fables __ has been accepted for publ~cat~on by the Un~vers~ty of Alabama
Press. His doctoral dissertation is on l,Jilfred Scawen Blunt and the Tradition of
the Sonnet Sequence in the 19th Century.
,
.
While on the staff of the University of Alabama s 40-person Engl~sh Department,
he served for a time as director of the teaching of technical English, conducted a
Seminar in the Teaching of College English in connection with the Ph.D. program, and
held a research grant from the University Research Council to make a study of the
life and l'lorks of William March, author of Company K and The Bad Seed.
While at Alabama he also had articles published in the Alabama ·School Journal,
Georgia Review, Alabama Review, Modern Language Notes, Modern Language Quarterly,
College English, The Explicator, and Notes and Queries. His work t'lith committees
of the Alabama Education Association on the articulation of high school and college
freshman English led to the publication of a pamphlet, Suggestions about the Preparation for College English.
A member of the Modern Language Association, the National Council of Teachers
of English, and the South Atlantic Modern Language Association (in which he served as
Chairman of the Freshman English Section,) he also belongs to Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi
Eta Sigma, Phi Delta Kappa, and Phi Beta Kappa.
At SIU he is co-chairman of the Graduate Development Committee, and a member of
the Scholarship, Curriculum, and Convocations committees.
His wife, Ivlargaret, also an Alabaman, holds an M.A. from Hellesley and a Ph.D.
from the University of Michigan.
Dr. James D. Turner, of the Alton Center's sociology staff was named Director of
the East St. Louis Residence Center by the SIU board.
Turner brought to his new job seven years' university residence center experience
(at the Gary, Indianapolis, and Jeffersonville Centers of Indiana University); teaching
experience in a southern university (associate professor of sociology, Florida State
University); two years' experience as a research analyst (American Bar Foundation,
Chicago, ,.,here he knew Hyman Frankel, sociology Alton); and more than five years in
the USMC (major).
He holds M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Indiana University in sociology, with minors
in law and political theory, and a B.S. from Mississippi Southern University.
Turner's group research, under the auspices of the American Bar Foundation, was
on the implementation of criminal law in Kansas, Wisconsin, and ~tichigan. H~ individual
research, conducted in the South, \'las on the differential implementation of the criminal
law in bi-racial communities.
The Turners, who live in Godfrey, have sons aged 5 and 2 and expect another child
in August.
Dr • Leonard B· Wheat, associate professor of education at the Alton Center ,.,as
designated Supervisor of Graduate Advisement today. A Columbia University, Ph.D., he
came to Southern Illinois University in January of this year from the University oi
Minnesota's Duluth Branch, where he had headed
(more)

�- 5 -

Mrs. t.Jheat will join him when their home in Duluth is sold. tvheat's three
youngest children attend the University of Ninnesota, two boys at Duluth and a
daughter at Minneapolis. The oldest son received his Ph.D. from Harvard this June,
and the older daughter, a practicing physician is married ~o a practising physician.
Dr ; John J. Glynn was officially desi gnated by the board as Evening College
Supervisor of the residence center in Alton. Business administration head of SL.
Louis University's Parks College before joining the Alton Center staff la s t September,
he received a Ph.D. in business administration from St. Louis University this Spring.
C:l i fton Cormzell _
, assistant professor of speech, \vas named Evening College
Supervisor of the East St. Louis Center.
Formerly assistant professor of speech and director of foren si cs at the University
of Hawaii, he had completed two years toward a doctorate at the University of Missouri
in 1950 when he wan recalled to active duty in the Korean Har.
After Korea he spent several years in the foreign trade program, sandwiching
in an assignment as foreign trade and development director for --the --Chamber of
Commerce in metropolitan St. Louis in 1955.
Dr. Harold H. See, executive dean of the centers, was promoted to professor,
and Dr. David Bear, education, Alton, to assistant professor.
Three staff members were made instructors: Caswell E. Peebles, business officer
for the Centers; Virgil Seymour, sociology , East St. louis; and Hrs. Evelyn Buddemeyer,
art, Alton.

/

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South'Western Illinois Residence Centers
Southern Illinois University

FACULTV

.

NEWS

BULLETIN

�JUNE~

Vaiiu .. IIJ' No .. 8

1959
FA. CULTY

NEWS

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

NOTHING CAN HOLD BACK THE DAWN
(Editorial lvhich appeared in the June 10
issue of the EDHl\RDSVILLE INTELLIGENCK"t . )
When it w·as learned recently that construction on the ne\v Southern Illinois University
campus at Ed\vardsville would not begin immediately, the first reaction naturally Has
one of disappointment.
But a quick review of what has been done in
just two short years to provide university
facilities in this part of the state shaHs
the positive steps far outdistance the negative.
T\vo years ago the nearest state university
was more than 100 miles away. Students in
other portions of the state could commute
to state-supported universities and still
work full or part time in their home communities to finance their education. This
was not the case with this area.

...

Madison and St. Clair counties, with the
greatest conce ntration of population in the
state outside Chicago, furnished a lar ge
volume of the tax money to support university facilities in other parts of the state,
but the only young people of this re gion Hho
could benefit from these facilities \vere the
ones who could afford to live away from home.
Since 1957 more than 4,500 individuals have
been enabled to avail themselves of university offerings in this area, and it is expected that 6,000 different persons will be
privileged to participate in some type of
university activity this coming year.
Assurances of support by the Governor, Hhich
include funds for architectural and engi neering studies, are tangible evidence that the
project to provide a major campus in this

area will go fon1ard. It has also been
reliably reported that in a few months the
central administrative offices of the Southwestern Illinois Campus will be moving to
the Edwardsville site.
While these developments are important in
themselves, of even greater import is the
assurance that benefits will continue to
evolve from the dynamic leadership provided
by SIU's administrators.
At the helm of SIU is a man with broad vision and a sensitivity to the needs of
Southern Illinois, an educator highly regarded throughout the entire state, Dr.
Delyte W. Morris. In charge of the university's program in this part of the state is
an indefatigable and effective administrator, equally \veil-informed on our area's
needs and highly regarded by each community
in the area, Dr. llarold W. See.
The effective teamwork displayed by these
men could well set the tone of cooperation
between our area and the rest of Southern
Illinois. Basing our confidence on the
impressive record scored by this leadership,
we look to the day when Southern Illinois
will achieve the level of development being
planned for it by these and other dedicated
individuals throughout the southern half of
Illinois.
GOVERNOR STRATTON ON SIU BRANCH
(Editorial which appeared on the editorial
page of a June 3 edition of the St. Louis
POST-DISPATCH.)
Although Governor Stratton did not encourage his visitors in beha~f of Southern Illi-

�- 2 -

nois University's Madison-St. Clair branch
to expect an immediate appropriation to
build a new campus, he did show a generally
friendly attitude toward the development of
greater educational facilities in the nearby Illinois area.
The Governor pointed out that his current
budget includen approximately $300,000 for
engineerinG and architectural studies of
the 1400-acre site near Edwardsville toHard
whose purchase 60,000 people have contributed nearly $600,000. As Mr. Stratton said,
this constitutes an actual investment by
the State of Illinois in the new campus,
and in any case, careful engineering and
~tchitectural studies ought to be conducted
before the first spade of earth can be
turned for the first new building.
Meantime the Governor's budget recognizes
the gro&gt;·l ing use of the residence centers in
Alton and East St. Louis by providing a
$700,000 deficiency appropriation for additional expenses incurred as more and more
young Illinoisans turned to the residence
centers.
The next two years will not be lost in the
development of Southern Illinois' MadisonSt. Clair branch university. The site can
be wholly acquired and carefully studied as
to its best uses. Plans can, indeed must,
be drawn thoughtfully and farsightedly.
Meantime the increase in attendance at the
residence centers will show the need still
more clearly to the officials and lmvmakers
at Springfield.
PRAISEHORTHY PURPOSE
(This editorial on the Southwestern Illinois
Chorophonic Society was carried in the June
4 issue of the 1\lton EVENING TELEGRAPH.)
Considerable pride can be felt by the Alton
area over the nev1ly "unveiled" Southt-1estern
Illinois Chorophonic Society. The chorus
of nearly a hundred gave its first concert
in the First Nethodist Church Monday niGht
(June 1), largely as an invitational affair.
If Dr. H. E. Headley's grooming of the choir

is any indication of the general quality of
faculty members on the SIU campus, then residents here have real reason for optimism.
The choir's performance of an intricate and
lengthy work completely new to all its members would have done credit to an organization with much longer to prepare it than
was avai~able to this group. But the chief
cause for complimenting Dr. Headley and his
chorus is the announced aim to study and
perform many other works in this tremendous
field.
Such masterpieces as the Cherubini mass performed the other night can lie about gathering dust for years without doing the world
any good. It is Hhen they are brought out
and given voice through such choruses as
Dr. Headley's that they accomplish their
missions. And a chorus such as Dr. Headley's
owes it to the Horld of music to bring these
pieces out and Hork with them, to see that
they live.
One can sit dovm and read a book, a magazine article or a newspaper easily and
learn what is in it. Most of the public,
however, must become acquainted with music
through hearing it. And choral \vorks require choral orcanizations to make them
available if the public is ever to rise above its "Mother Goose" acquaintance with
music literature.
The Southwestern Illinois Chorophonic Society, then, Hill be performing a great service
to the world of music by presenting these
pieces; to its members by making them acquainted with the \vorks at a performer's
level, and to the public by interpreting
them. It is a praiseworthy purpose, ~ndeed.
We wish Dr. Headley the highest success in
his avowed aims.

COLLECTION PRESENTED'TO ALTON CENTER
Harold E. Broadbooks has presented a
$2,000 collection of stuffed birds and
mammals to the University's Alton Residence
Center. Collected in Mexico, Arizona, Ne\-1
Mexico, Y-Jashington, Oregon, Michigan, and
Illinois, the 65 birds and 573 mammals Here
skinned and stuffed as scientific study

�- 3 -

specimens. &lt;~ong the birds are such specimens as a loon, sooty shearwater, black
brant, murrelet, glaucous-winged gull,
Cooper's hawk, chimney swift, wanderinG
tattler and screech owl. Some of the mammals are the western mole, long-tailed
shrew, several different kinds of bats,
weasel, spotted skunk, ground squirrel s,
western chipmunks, flying squirrel, pocl,e t
gophers, kangaroo rats, beaver, many kind s
of mice, cotton rat, packrat, jackrabbit
and the skull of a mountain lion. Also
included are a fe,., dozen reptiles and amphibians and about 100 marine invertebrates
collected at Friday Harbor on Puget Sound.

work is "Criteria for the Selection and
Retention of Students in Business Education in Colleges and Universities." Miss
Brady is recording secretary of the Soroptimist Club of Alton. She was installed
in the office on June 11.

TEA HELD FOR STUDENTS
Babette Marks and Hary M. Brady were
hostesses June 3 at a tea given in Tolman
Hall for business education and physical
education majors.

MISCELLANY
TAKING A VACATION?
John Schnabel is not running a travel
bureau (he knmvs the Administration frmvns
on staff members holding down two jobs-Ed.). Hmvever, his office has been flooded
with vacation material from all over the
United States. Faculty members are welcome
to any of the material to be found on di s play tables in the registrar's office at
both centers. If you have not decided
w;here to spend your vacation, perhaps you
will find an idea.
(Secure your information from the material available--personne l
in those offices \·J ill not be able to ansue r
your questions--Ed.).

CHAIRMAN OF MUH BOARD
Ruth Kilchenmann has been appointed to the
board of the Alton branch of the i\merican
Association of University Women. As chairman of International Relations, Miss
Kilchenmann says she hopes to organize a
study group in international relations as
part of Alton's AAUH program.
BRADY TO CI:IAIRHL\N RESEARCH COMMITTEE
Mary M. Brady has been asked to serve as
chairman of a research committee for the
Alpha chapter (NeH York University) of
Delta Pi Epsilon, graduate honorary fraternity in business education. The re search
subject on which the committee members ui ll

Hiscellaneous it ems picked up by your
editor during lunch one day at the East
St. Louis Residence Center • • . Olli0.
Mae hli lliams says her vacation plans
aren't very interesting; during most of
the summer she &gt;·Jill be on duty at · the East
St. Louis library • . . hlillia~ Probst
volunteered only one quotable quote, "I'm
not getting married" . . . Robert McDaniel
will teach one class and take graduate
work at hTashinr;ton University--ibidem-George Arnold . . . Florence Fanning says
she will be teaching at the center but she
didn't get around to telling us her vacation plans . • . John Knoepfle will teach
during the summer session and plans to go
to Moose Factory, Canada. He says it has
nothing to recommend it--that's \vhy he's
going. He aren't sure whether or not he
was pulling our leg . . . Peter Simpson
reports he will spend the second summer
session teaching at St. Louis University
• . . Donald 0 . Harris' daughter, }largaret,
a fresh6an last year at the University of
Michigan, will serve this summer on the
College Board at Scruggs Vandervoort
Barney in St. Louis . . . After the summer
quarter, H. H. Smith plans a vacation in
Munising, Hichir;an . . . James Diekroeger
will do graduate uork at Indiana University
. . . Tom Evans told us about his new secretary, Mrs. E. C. Hemmer. Mrs. Hemmer,
he says, has tHo s ons and a daughter; her
husband is a partner in an accounting firm.
They are from East St. Louis • . . S. D.
Lovell atte nded t he Midwest Political

�- 4 Science Association's annual meeting last
month, which &gt;vas held at Miami University,
Oxford, Ohio. Conclusion of your editor
--lunch hour well spent.
AAUP ELECTS OFFICERS
Elected to serve as officers of the Alton
chapter of the 1\rnerican Association of
University Professors for the coming year
are Melvin E. Kazeck, president; John I.
~. vice pr~sident; Marian Taylor, secretary-treasurer, and Hyman H. Frankel,
executive committee member.
At the East St. Louis center S. D. Lovell
was re-elected president and John l·
Knoepfl.e uas re-elected secretary-treasurer. Other officers include H. H. Smith,
vice president, and Milton B. Byrd and
Nedra Reames, executive committee memb ers .

GOING TO UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH
Nedra Reames says she is getting excited
about her plans for the summer. And well
she might for she is leaving June 17 to
attend the summer session at the University
of Edinburgh. The course will be a studies
program including history, philosophy and
literature. "I'll have a few days to spend
in Ireland before going to Scotland and then
from August 8 until school starts in September, I'm going to to.u r England and
Europe--at least until my money runs out."
(Best wishes to you, Nedra, and a happy
and profitable summer.--Ed.)
ARTICLE IN GERMAN PUBLICATION
Upon invitation of the editors Gunter H.
' Remmling wrote an artic.le for the Hay
issue d f GESUNDHEITSPOLITIK published in
Berlin-Munchen. The article was entitled
"Automation and Public Health."

BAILEYS FLYING TO VIRGIN ISLANDS
Mr. and Mrs. Chelsea Bailey will leave
July 5 for the Virgin Islands. Their
Eastern Air Lines flight will be by \·7o.y
of Miami and S.::m Juan. The Baileys Hill
visit their daughter and son-in-lmv, Hr .
and Mrs. Henry G. Wood. ~\'ood, former
counsel for the Hoover Commission, is a
practicing attorney in St. Thomas. Bailey
plans to take a number of color slides
while he is gone, he said. He and Mrs.
Bailey are also looking forward to enjoying the Hoods' private beach at their
home just eight miles from St. Thomas.
They plan to return to their home in
Edwardsville the last week of July.
(Bon voyage, Ruth and Chelsea Bailey,
from all your friends on the S~-JI Campus
staff:-·Ed.)
FREDERICK \JILLI/\11 THE FIFTH
Frederick H. Zurheide and his wife
Frances have a son, born last month.
Their first child, he has been christened
Frederick Hilliam and is the fifth so
named in the Zurheide family.

'
WOMEN' S CLUB ELECTS
The Women's Club of the Southwestern Illinois Campus has elected Mrs. Melvin E.
Kazeck to serve an president during the
coming year. Other officers include ~trs.
Lawrence NcAneny, vice president; Mrs.
R. H. Steinkellner, \s ecretary; Mrs. James
Turner, treasurer, and Mrs. Howard Davis,
director-at-large. Mrs. S. D. Lovell
presented the nominating committee's slate
of officers at the May 14 meeting held'
at the home of Hrs. D. Q. }{arris in Belleville. Presiding at a table displaying
china from the Hin~ dynasty which the hostess brought from China, were Mrs. Harold
W. See and Mrs. Raymond Spahn.
TO GIVE PAPER AT HLA MEETING
Nicholas Joost has been invited to give
a paper at the Modern Language Association
meeting, to be held next December in Chicago.
The paper, Joost says, will be read during
a symposium on satire and the modern Christian literary tradition. He has been in-

�- 5 -

vited to discuss poetic satire, such as
that by Auden and Campbell.
RECEIVES APPOINT}ffiNT ON WHITE HOUSE
CONFERENCE
As a member of the East St. Louis Social
Planning Committee, James Diekroeger has
been asked to serve on the Family, Children
and Old Age Division Committee to complete
a study on the 1960 l.Jhite House Conference
on Youth and Children. Diekroeger' s vmrl'
will deal with information on recre~tional
facilities in this area.
FACULTY

\~RSUS

in music for the elementary school.
"Although the workshop is designed primarily for the elementary classroom teach•
er," Blakely said, "the presentation \vill
be of interest to all who work with young
children." Mins Zander is presently
serving as music consultant for the Follett
Publishing Company of Chicago. Blakely
served as an adjudicator at the Class B
state finals in the Illinois music contests, judging woodvrinds and bands at
the state contest held in Carbondale.Last
month he attended the North Central Division Convention of the Music Educators
National Conference held at the Conrad
Hilton Hotel in Chicago.

STUDENTS
STAFF MEMBERS i? ILL SPEAKING ENGAGENENTS

In a volley ball match June 3 at East St.
Louis, the faculty team outplayed a student
team. The first game ended 14-11 in favor
of the students but in the second match
they were shut out by a score of 9-0. The
third encounter resulted in an overtime contest, the faculty eking out a 16-14 victory.
Playing for the faculty were \.Ji lliam Probst,
Peter Simpson, Howard Nesbitt, James Diekroeger, George Arnold, Harold Berrv and
David Henson. He wouldn't be quite honest,
however, if \ve didn' t point out that Berry
and Henson are students, although they uere
drafted to fill out the faculty squad.
LLOYD BLAKELY REPORTS
that merit awards, admitting the~ecipients
into the bands of the Southwestern Illinois
Campus of SIU without audition, have been
distributed to some 200 graduating seniors
from the secondary schools in this area.The
awards \vere given in recognition of outstanding musicianship in school bands and
were awarded upon recommendation of each
student's bandmaster. Enrollment of these
students in our campus bands is providinG
the potential for one of the finest instrumental ensembles in the midwest, Blakely
said. He reports also that tentative plans
call for Beulah Zander, former state supervisor of music uithin the State Department
of Public Instruction of Illinois, to be on
the Alton cnmpus July 6 and 7 for a workshop

Some of the speaking engagements on Clifton
Cornwell's sprinG schedule included a talk
on "Speech Arts" ijiven May 24 at the Public
Relations for Unions Conference and sponsored by AFL-CIO Community Services; a
commencement address at St. Jacob High
School May 28, and a talk last month before a Madison County organization of
realtors.
Chelsea Bailey spoke at the Edwardsville
Rotary Club on June 4.
James L. Diekroep,er spoke June 9 at the
Athletic and Intramural Awards program at
Rock Junior High School, East St. louis.
On June 12 Stephnnie B. Conwell lectured
staff nurses at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Harion. Her topic was
"The Team Conference in Planning for
Patient Care."

Howard V. Davis npoke May 5 at Career Day
at Southwestern High School on "The Place
of the College in Educational Planning."
On May 17 he gave the dedicatory address
at Eastwood School, East Alton, and on
May 29 delivered the commencemen·t address
at Venice High School, Venice, Illinois
"Our Present German Policy" was the topic
Richard C. Baker discussed May 28 before .

�- 6 the Alton League of Women Voters. Included
on this program, also, were two professors
at Principia College, who traced briefly
the history of the foreign policy of the
United States. Baker has been advised
that a former pupil of his, Patricia
Cravens, \oJho uas a freshman on the Alton
campus last year, has been awarded a
scholarship at Ohio State University for
study this summer. Miss Cravens, who
transferred to the Carbondale campus last
fall, will study Russian government,
Baker said.
John J. Glynn spoke to the Lions Club of
on Hay 12, discussing "What S. I. U.
Will Mean to the Community." At therequest of A. Gordon Dodds, Southern alumnus
and superintendent of the Edwardsville
schools, on Hay 26 Glynn addressed 80
Edwardsville IIi ch Schoo 1 seniors who had
distinguished themselves during their hi Gh
school career. Title of his speech-" After Graduation, What?" On Memorial
Day he was principal speaker at a program
in Brighton sponsored by the Local American Legion Post.

for Sergeants" are to be congratulated
for the fine performance before an overflow audience June 6. Quoting from the
ALTON TELEGRAPH, "The scenes with rare
exception were adroitly paced, and in
several of them--notably the one in which
Will drives the psychologist nuts--equalled
the slick HollyHood version . . . " (\\le
are sorry to hear that Miss Smith's mother
died the afternoon preceding the performance.
In true "show must go on" tradition, she
waited until after the final rehearsal to
advise the cast. Our deepest sympathy to
a real "trooper."--Ed.)

~\Iorden

Harold H. See addressed the ~vitt High
School graduatinG class on May 28. Topic
of his address uas "All for the Hant of
a Nail."
Speaker at this year's Memorial Day services at Collinsville was· R. H. Steinkellner. His speech was carried in its entirety in the Nay 27 issue of the Collinsville
weekly ne~vspaper.
ART EXHIBIT AT LOOMIS HALL
A "Best of the Year" exhibit has been
on display in loomis Hall gallery representing the Hork of 22 students at the
Alton Center. The 53 art pieces in oils,
ceramics, drauings and water colors \vere
selected by a committee as the best \oJorl'
of the year by students of Evelyn Budderoever's classes.
OVERFL0\7 AUDIEI:lCE ENJOYS ARC PLAYERS
Mary BelJ.c Smith and the cast of "No Time

CO-AUTHOR OF BOOK
Herbert H. Rosenthal is one of three
authors of THE CO~PS OF ENGINEERS: TROOPS
AND EQUIPMENT, to be released June 18.
Published by the Office of the Chief of
Military History, Department of the Army,
Hashington, D. C., the book is the first
of four volumes that will describe the
participation bf the engineers in \~rld
Har II and the contribution they made
toward winning it.
The war demanded unprecedented constuction
from the Army's Corps of Engineers. In
General Douglas HacArthur's island-hopping
campaign, engineers manned landing craft,
rolled supplies across beaches and Hewed
out the jungle for landing strips. Thousands of miles of gasoline pipeline were
laid, vital seaports reconstructed and
vast quantities of maps furnished.
Set in the United States, this volume
describes the years of intricate planning
and preparing \·lhich paved the way for these
achievements overseas. The interplay be ·tween engineers and other services and
higher commands is amply explored \vith
lively delineation of personalities,
according to advance publicity.
Rosenthal joined the SIU staff at Carbondale in 1955 as an instructor of history
and transferred to the Alton Residence
Center in 1958. I~ received hi~ bachelor's
and master's deGrees from the University
of Virginia and his doctorate in nroerican

�- 7 -

history from Harvard University. During
World War II he served in Europe with the
95th Infantry Division. He was associated
with the Engineer Historical Division from
1948 to 1953. The SIU teacher is currently working on another book which concerns
the Progressive }bvement in New York State,
subject of his doctoral dissertation. His
article, "The Cruise of the Tarpon," appeared in the October 1958 issue of Neu
York History. Rosenthal's promotion to
associate professor of history, to become
effective September 23, was approved last
month by the SIU Board of Trustees.
The dominant theme before Pearl Harbor
is the engineers' adjustment to new vehicles and \vecipons and their consequent
struggle to maintain their position with•
in the infantry division and carve out a
role with armor~d and air forces. The
months follmving Pearl Harbor were marked
by shifts in strategic plans, fluctuatin 0
troop bases, accelerated training schedules,
a growing m.Jareness of the magnitude and
intricacy of logistical support and optimistic procurement programs.
During the final years of the war the
engineers turned out a more versatile
soldier through lengthened and more realistic training. Improvements in forecasting requirements and greater access
to raw materials having eased the procurement of supplies, an orderly distribution became the primary goal.
•

The book has been described as one which
"captures the spirit of the priod--the
confusion, the conflicts, the harassed
officers, the briefly-trained troops,
the atmosphere of scarcity, the urgency
of time."

�•

•

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                    <text>JiARCH 31 .•

VoL.l~

1958

No.11

~

CoNPILED l10NTHLY BY JNFORI1ATION SERVICE, SouTHWESTERN ILLINOIS
RESIDENCE Q
S UTHERN ]LLI NOIS UNIVERSITY, FOR THE STAFF
FFICE~
0
NE V.I SLETTER IS !JADE POSSI11El1BERS OF THE RESIDENCE CENTERS, THE
BLE BY THE COOPERATION OF STAF F J1El1B ERS WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED
NEWS I TEJ1S.

FACULTY

NE WS LETTER

Spring Quarter Staff Changes
Dr. Leonard B. Hheat became acting director at the East St. Louis Center on
March 26. A Columbia University Ph.D., he came to Southern Illinois University
last quarter from the University of Minnesota's Duluth Branch, where he had headed
secondary education for ten years. Mrs. t,J heat will move here \vhen their home in
Duluth is sold . Wheat's three youngest children attend the Univ_~_rli~ .ty __,of Minnesota, two boys at Duluth and a daughter at Minneapolis. The oldest son receives
his Ph.D. from Harvard this June, and the older daughter, a practicing physician,
is married (to a practising physician).
Wheat replaces Dr. Ring, who resigned as director in order to be able to
spend more time at horne, where his wife is recovering from a serious illness.
Dr. Ring is teaching education courses in the Centers this quarter and enjoying
it tremendously. Best wishes to the two Rings and ' to Wheat too! (He'll need 'em.-ed.)
A new position in math at the Center was filled by Colonel Donald Quitman
.
Harris, who will also teach two SIU math courses at Scott Air Force Base. He
attended the University of Michigan for two years and holds degrees from \Vest Point
and the University of Missouri, where he taught for five years. Three years ago
he retired from the Army to go into bu s iness in Chicago. (From what other organization can one retire on a full pension at the tender age of fifty? - ed.) Colonel Harris will move his family here this summer from Oak Park, Illinoi s , when·
his daughter Margaret finishes high school. This quarter he is staying at 2011
\Vest Main Street, Belleville.
Spring Quarter appointments at the Alton Residence Center include four new
lecturers: Dr. Marion Ansel Taylor, Ph.D. from SUI (State University of Iowa)
and staff member at Illinois State Normal University for ten years; Robert E.
McDaniel, holder of two SIU business degrees (single); Eileen T. Torney, Boston
University math M.A.; Captain Robert B. Mornier, Syracuse University doctoral
candidate; and Herbert J. Vent, Stanford University Ph.D. Vent and Mornie~ both
from Air University's geography staff in Montgomery, Alabama, will alternate
teaching geography. Vent will be here only until Mornier gets his military discharge next month.
Peter Carl Nittolo , finance librarian at the Prudential Insurance Company,
Newark, Nelv Jerse y , will become associate librarian at the Alton Center on June 12.
A Rutgers graduate, he joined Cornell University's library staff after receiving
his library degree at Columbia University. He was director of Roselle, New York,
Public Library before joining Prudential tlvo years ago. He is teaching economics
the Spring Quarter, and in June he will replace Librari an Alfred Harris, who has
resigned.
All of us would like to see Al stay on, but we love him too much to try to
stand in the Vlay of his making a move \vhich he con si ders in his best interest.
(More on Al in June . - ed.)
(more)

�..

- 2 -

Clifton corm-1e 11 , speec h , East St · Louis ' didn't get
. a write-up when he came
to Southern Illinois University 60 Ne\·lsletter offers th~s belated sketch: Cornwell,
a doctoral candid t
t the University of Missouri when the Korean Har began, was
aea
h
'ld''
.
recalled to active army duty in 1950 and assigned to osp~ta a m1n~strat1on, a
field he had learned in W.H.II. After Korea he continued ·working \.Jith North and
South American hospitals in the business field. In 1955 he sandHiched in an extra
job as foreign trade and development director for the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan St. Louis. His teaching experience includes two years as assistant professor
of speech and director of forensics at the University of Hawaii. The Cornwell's have
a one-year-old son, Mark and daughters, Kristin, L~; Constance, 6; and Carole, 14.

----------------------------Editorial
Loyalty to the administration is well and good, but here is. at} .ex~mple of it
that should be exposed: When Spring Quarter enrollment reached 1,498 recently,
and Dean See remarked (casually but significantly) that 1, 500 -v:ould be a nicer,
rounder number, one misguided staff member registered for a class himself and
(worse) dragged hi.s poor wife along to become another statistie in See's records,

----------------------------Three Alton Staff M~mbers have Material Published
Professor William T. Going, English, Alton, has articles appearing in the
February issues of two magazines on Faulkner's famous short story, "A Rose for
Emily." The first, concerning the meaning of the title of the story, appeared in
The Exelicator. The second, entitled "Chronology in Teaching 'A Rose for Emily',"
appeared in Exercise Exchange. (This latter magazine, financed in part by Rinehart
&amp; Company, pays small stipends for its articles --- a practice unusual in scholarly
journals - ed.)
Between quarters Professor and Mrs. Going journeyed to Alabama to visit their
parents. Professor Going spent several days on the University of Alabama campus,
where he conferred with the committee to appoint a new chairman of the Department
of English and with the University of Alabama Press, which is planning to publish
a book by Professor Going during the next year. Mrs. Going is rema~n1ng in Alabama for a time to be with her mother, who was injured in a fall.
Dr. Howard Davis, student affairs, Alton, has had an article accepted for
publication by the Journal of Educational Research. Entitled "The Status of
Guidance Workers in Missouri, 1954-57", the article was written by invitation of
A. s. Barr of the University of Hisconsin.
Howard is convention news editor of the American Personnel and Guidance Association meeting in St. Louis scheduled for the week of March 31. He also served as
chairman of one of the s~ctional meetings on the "Counselor's Self-Concept." On
April 21 he will give Coolidge Jr. High School in Granite City some tips on "Helping
Adolescents over Emotional Hurdles."
Dr. Edwin B. Warren, music, Alton and East St. Louis, has been notified by
Summy-Birchard of Chicago that his Responses are going into a second edition this
summer. He has just finished proofreading the MS. for the second edition. The first
edition of this collection of responses was published by Summey in 1956.
(more)

�,
- 3 -

On April 1 Warren speaks on the careers Night Program at the Alton Senior
High School, and on April l8 and 19 he is one of the judges in the State Final
Music Contests at Mount Vernon.

---------------------------Dr. Eric Baber, director, Alton, told the Phi Del~a Kappa Chapter of SIU
at its Narch noon meeting in Carbondale about "Trends ~n Educational Administration.''

---------------------------Dr. Joseph w. Bird, professor of management and business ~dm~nistrat~on, Alton,
was the principal speaker at the Madison County Teachers Assoc~a,t _v~n~ . !ll~.et~ng at the
East Alton Senior High School on March 5. Topic: "Everybody Knows What's t.Jrong
with Education." He said "Never have so many people been so interested in education
(vocally). Everyone knows all about education. Everyone has either had an education
or not had one. If he's had one, he knows what is wrong with it. If he hasn't had
one, he knmvs what's wrong with everybodyelse.
He pointed out that our basic problem in education is to determine what &gt;ve
should be trying to do and then to do it. He granted that a solution to this complex problem will not be found easily.
Bird maintained that we in education are making entirely too much of the science
of studying the teacher rather than the textbook. He would advocate developing the
mind rather than placing so much emphasis on teaching the specific action to be performed, regardless as to whether this might meet with some opposition from students,
parents, or even school boards.
He expressed concern about the fact that the products of our educational system
would rather drive an automobile on a crowded highway on a holiday than read a good
book, and asked whether our students should be expected t o learn to read, write, and
spell or whether they should be permitted to continue to attend classes which require
practically no preparation and in which they merely sit around and discuss things
in general between coffee breaks.
(His specific recommendations are too important to be condensed here, but
Newsletter stands ready to furnish copies of the complete address on request.-ed.)

--------------------------Dr. Leonard Wheat, acting director, East St. Louis, slaved through the last
heavy snow of the season to address forty hardy parents on "Higher Educational
Opportunities in the Alton Area." The following week he took part in a panel on
"A Curriculum for Our Schools." FellaH participants, all from Alton Community
School District 11 were: Dr. James B. Johnson, Superintendent; Mrs. Mary Hershey,
Board of Education member; and Raymond Ready, Supervisor 9f Elementary Schools.

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

�•

- 4 -

The staff members of the East St. Louis Center had a dinner March 14 at the
East St . Lou1s
· H'1gh Sc h oo 1 ca f eter1a.
·
Dr · Ring ' '"ho had planned the excellent
dinner, introduced all of the guests. After dinner the adults Hent to the gym
for square dancing planned by Hr. Evans and called by Babette Marks, and the
children took part in activities planned by Dr. Lovell.

--------------------------Babette Narks and Norman Showers planned a faculty square dance for the Alton
faculty March 15. Ten couples danced to the calling of Babette Marks and enjoyed
it so much that they want to make it a monthly aff air. The next square dance is
planned for April 12 (Saturday) at the Alton Center gym. All staff members of both
Centers are invited.

--------------------------Homen 1 s Club Activities
The follmving women attended the second regular meeting of the Residence Centers•
Women 1 s Club at the Broadview Hotel Harch 13: from Alton - Nartha Lou Bardolph,
Jane Broadbooks, Carma Davis, Anne Hampton, and Geneva Peebles; from East St. Louis
and Belleville - Ruth Bailey, Una Cornuell, Franc e s Evans, Verita HoHell, Ruth Lovell,
Marjorie Meyer, Rachael Parry, Lois Ring, Helen Se e , and Betty Spahn.
The April 17 meeting of the club, also schedu l ed for the Broadview, \vill feature
an address by Dr. John W. Allen, Emeritus, Carbond a le campus.
Ne~vsletter for April will give details of the tvlO-campus family picnic being
planned by the Club for May. The exe cutive council of the Club met last Monday at
the home of President Carma Davis, 814 Bee Tree Lane, East Alton. Agenda included
naming of a nominating committee to suggest candid ates for the election of next
year's officers.
Report on Housing
A complete report of faculty housing will have to be postponed for at least
another month. So far, the tentative list of home owners includes: Evans, Fanning,
Seymour, McAneny, Bardolph, Showers, VanHorn, Davi s , Turner, Bear, Warren, and Lovell
(abuilding). Reports on any other faculty home owners gratefully received.

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

Faculty openings for 1958-59
If you know of good persons in l:he following f ields, please notify Dr. Eric
Baber, Director, Alton Residence Center, 2809 Coll e ge Avenue, Alton: math, government-history, chemistry, general business-secretar i al science, economics-accounting,
business administration, art, physic s , French, bot any, zoology , the early periods of
English literature ££ 20th century wr iters, Chaucer or 17th ce ntury or America~
literature, choral directing, instrumental music wo r~ enginee r ing drawing, and
women's P.E.

--------------------------Betty Spahn, math, East St. Louis has asked Newsletter to publish her new home
address so that staff members can cocrect their address books. The new address is:
3204 West Main Street, Belleville, Illinois, (Telephone: Adams 3-4424).

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

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                    <text>FA C ULT Y
NEWS
BU L L E T I N

SouTHERN I LLINOIS UN I VER S I TY RESIDEN CE CENTERS

..

(

]vfARCH_, 1959

Vo L. II _, No . 5

�J1ARCH~

VoL. II.! No . 5

1959

F A CULTY

N Efi S

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

THE SNILING LINCOLN
"Fetv artists ever captured the natural good humor of shy, self-conscious Abe
Lincoln--and they needed psychology to do
it, 11 according to John Allen and Ed Has ::;e.
Allen and Hasse collaborated recently on a
story about "The Smiling Lincoln," a portrait by 1Uban J. Conant which hangs in the
Southern Illinois University library at the
Alton Residence Center. The story appeared
in the February 8 edition of Family Heeklv,
a syndicated feature magazine included in
many Sunday ne\'lspapers. Conant \'laS one of
the fetv artists vJho successfully captured
Lincoln's genial smile on canvas.
Conant went to Springfield to paint
Lincoln in September, 1860, two months before his election to the presidency."t-ihen
the artist tvas ushered into his office,
Lincoln was talking with a small group of
men--and he was smiling. {.Jhen he sat for
the portrait, however, he assumed hi::; characteristically sober expression. All thnt
first day, Conant pleaded in vain; the
smile did not return . . .
"The next day Conant started by asking
Lincoln questions about himself; before
. long Abe tvas talldng of his early life, his
storekeeping experience, his flatboat trips
to New Orleans, how he became a lawyer.Uis
itm1ediate tvorries forgotten, Lincoln again
revealed the expression the artist wanted. 11
That uas the way he looked when hie
friends Here about him, his wife said. "I
hope he lool&lt;s that way after the fir s t of
November."
Shurtleff College purchased the portrait from the artist in the 1860's. It
was later lost in transferring furni shings
from one building to another. Years after,
it turned up in a storage area under n
staircase and college officials had it
cleaned and restored.

John Allen, retired staff member, is
well known in state historical circles.
His articles on folklore of Southern Illinois are carried in many of the area newspapers. Hasse is an instructor and \vriter
for Information Service at Carbondale.
INVITED TO CONTRIBUTE ARTICLE
Alfred E. Kuenzli has been invited to
contribute an article to a forthcoming issue of the Journal of Education which &gt;vi ll
be devoted to problems of emotionally disturbed children. nn article by Kuenzli
entitled "A Field Experience Program tvith
Emotionally Disturbed Children'' appeared in
the December 1958 issue of Exceptional
Children.
LOTS OF TIME FOR SERGEANTS
A story about Camp Crawford, near
Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan, has been accepted
by U. S. lady, a Washington publication for
service wives. The story is called "Lots
of Time for Sergeants" and was written by
Narion A. Taylor, &gt;·Jho lived in Japan for a
year and a half .
TO SERVE AS INTERH1 NINISTER
Kenneth F. Estey has been invited by
the First Baptist Church of Staunton to
serve as its interim minister pending call
of a new pastor. Estey is serving as a
regional director for the Christian Higher
Education Challenge, a program to raise
$7,500,000 for educational institutions of
the American Baptt c t Convention.On February
18 he gave an illustrated lecture on Brazil
to the High Twelve Club in Wood River.

�- 2 -

DIRECTS JUNTOR BOHLING PROGRAM

SERVED ON PANEL

For the past 10 years Norman ShoHers
has operated for the Alton Recreation Commission a junior bowling program. This
program 1:-1as featured in the last issue of
the National Limerican Junior Bm-1ling Congress maGazine. Showers helped \·lith a
special junior bowling tournament Harch 5,
part of the National A.B.C. tourney held
in St. Louis during February and 1·1 arch.
Fifty-two boys and girls took part in the
program. Showers also prepared an aHards
program for some 500 persons. The event
was on Harch 13, at which time he presented 1,000 trophies, chevrons, certificates and other mvards.

Mary H. Brady served on a panel at the
State Leadership Conference for Office Occupations and Distributive Education which
\vas held in SprinGfield February 28. Topic
for discussion was '' Career Training in
Secretarial Fields Beyond High School."

ADDRESSES PTA
On February 16 David E. Bear addressed the members of the Columbus-Hadley
Parent-Teacher Association at Edwardsvill e .
Bear described the history and developmen t
of the grading system in public schools
and explained the basic philosophy of the
two major systems, that of grade standard~
set up for the class as a whole and that
of grading according to the ability of
the individual child.

THE LITTLE TERPS
The Terpsichorean Club has received
a tremendous response in its organization
of "The Little Terps Dance Group." Thi s
dance class for children of staff members
was organi z ed February 26 and will meet
each Tuesday at l~: 15 p.m. at the gymnasium in the East St. Louis Residence Center. AccordinG to Marjorie Logan, 1:-1ho i s
in charge, tap, ballet, acrobatics, foU:
and creative rhythms are being taught.
Children from three to ten are eligible.
There is no charge for these lessons and
absolutely no expense is involve~ for
staff parents. The Little Terps 'lvill make
their debut Hay 13 at convocation. They
will also perform for the faculty potluck .

READS PAPER AT NLA 1-IEETING
At the Christmas meeting in Ne1:v York
City of the Hodern Language Association,
John I. Ades read a paper before Group 9.
The general subject of the group tvas the
literary criticism of the Romantic period
in England. Ade 1 s paper was entitled
"Charles Lamb and the Aesthetics of Sympathy." I t dealt tvith the problem of application of the doctrine of sympathy to the
criticism of literature. For the past few
months ~tr. Ades has been serving as music
reviewer for the Alton Evening Telegraph.

JAZY POETRY NIGHT
Three faculty members of the East St.
Louis Residence Center took part February 17
in Jazy Poetry Hight, a program staged to
raise funds for the student literary magaz ine at St. Louis University. A very edifying representation of SIU students attended this event at Marguerite Hall on the
St. Louis University campus. Poems read by
John I. Knoepfle included "Acteon," "Little
Harpe's Head" and 11 0n a Fall Night." Albert
Hontesi, who teaches in the evening nchool,
read "Job." Peter Simpson read "Let Be Be
Finale of Sum" and "For Dylan Thomas: Five
Years After."
The follmvinG evening, a group of St.
Loui s University Hriters read from their
works at The Center in St. Louis. Included
were Simpson and lfuoepfle. Knoepfle read
"Three Poems Hritten in Sand" and Simpson,
"St. Louis by the llississippi," "The Fourth
Nature of the S1:-Jallou" and "A Trainee 1 s
August Love."
Simpson 1 s poem on the Mississippi 1:vas
carried recently in the St. Louis PostDispatch. Here it is for you to read and
enjoy:

�- 3 I

SAINT LOUIS BY Tlffi MISSISSIPPI
For although \ve see that the city i s in· the world, we do not see that it follo\-lS
that any things belonging to the city pe r t ain to the wor l d. For it is possible that
such things may be worshipped and beli eved in the city, a ccording to false opinions,
as have no existence either in the vmrld or out of it.
--Saint Augustine, The City of God
Freights cough across Ead c Brid ge, and spit their s oot
to January \vinds; it marrie s \vith t he smoke a risin g
from the licorice factory, sage into sl e ep , and s oils
the rolling Mississippi's f latly s cowling fac e . Jus t nou
the river's tired from a winte r's wild c a rouse; it suirls ,
it sucks the chilly driz z le and tiny veins streak out,
and pump dead blood that yellows dry Missouri into mud.
The muscles of the town don't fle x much any more from
theold river's bright and tensil e s tren gth. A fe\·l men
ride the sluggish bar ges; comme r c i a l e nte rpris e run s
boats, mostly South to Nemphi s or Ne&gt;v Orle ans. Hha t u e
remember most: the afternoon e xcur s ions, the moonli ght
dancing on the Steame r Admiral, hi ghb a lls, picnic s ,
and penny machines to tell a lit t l e f ortune . Ant e nna
from the East, Highway 40 tune s the city's shoulde r ;
the cars come \vhi zz ing in, e ach blank unruffled brm·J
of uindshield streaked with unlucl' y bugs, made fos s il s
in an hour's time. Cars filter t hrou gh the corpu s of the town.
II

Thus the sun of the spirit is like a gr a s s hopp e r in the Sun of God.
--Paul Claude l, from Five Grand Odes
I \vatch the ,..;rater that cut thi s bluf f and sculpte d a c;ity
out of the heaving loam. Time-past ting l e s all my \vaving
nerves: the virile penetr a tion o f the pioneers come to
these lavish banks to trade. Nm-1 the squares are s enil e ;
the icy trolley wires shrink ti gh t; jots are in the mute d
s treet si gns; tittles fill the ho pe less homes. Things
crumble; and motes lodge and smar t in the hollow hoosier e yes.
Bishops' hopes rose, gripped in a gr e ement the mayor's hand.
Their heads never hung on pike s do\mtown. The y guide some
souls through sugar clouds on uin gs of cr a fty novena tunes.
Poor sweat stinks under unhired arms. Di zz y and loaded old
girls stumble and climb up the bricklaid cliffs, the ir dark
unlls hung Hith Varga girls or tau dry Sacred Heart s .
There's no mark here of the gore o f the lamb, on doors
Hhcre clerks, still asleep, jump out, and do ze a long
at the Globe's disgrace, Hhi le the bus snor e d dovm
to the job. lmowing the river r uns at the town ' s Ea st
end is part of their condition. Dut this flame do esn't
leap, though these cold jack-diamonds burn. If my s oul
crickets in God's sun, if I get f ried in an immolation
of Ilis city, when my le gs curl to death, this crabb e d
insect can cry, can clutch the Cros s 's splinters as the y
float the mi ghty Mississippi. A little of His fl e sh e ach
day can mal'e us grmv. A little o f his blood can make uc clean.

�-

L; -

SERVED AS HODERATOP,

ATTEND CONVENTIONS

On February 23 Howard v. Davis served
as moderato'r of a panel discussion at the
East Aiton Junior High School on "Are He
Spoiling Our Children?"

Kenneth Hartin and Hary H. Brady
attended the annual convention of the
National Association for Business Teacher
Education in Chica:.;o foebruary 12-14. The
convention was held in conjunction with
the meeting of the American Association of
Colleges for Teacher Education.

BECAUSE TilEY Hi\HT TO SING
(The fo llouin~ editorial appeared
in the February 25 issue of the Alton
Evening Te ler;raph.)
There are some things you like to
see get grmvin:.; pains. The Alton Community Chorus suffered the malady at its
first rehearsal lionday night. This group
got a start, Hith an overcrmvded rehearse1l
hall, that promiscsbright things for its
future.
The Choir Directors' and Organist f: '
Guild sponsored "Hessiah" earlier under
Herrold Headley, Hho is organizing the
Community Chorus, also demonstrated to
the public the excellence of the neu
group's leadership.
Alton has needed a community chorus
which has this sort of activity in mind,
and which \vill not be satisfied to make it
secondary to other choral activity. Only
with this approach can such a group suc-cessfully negotiate the myriad choral
masterpieces uhich lie open and challenging.
Dr. Headley apparently struck the
right note Hhen he invited folks to enter
the group because they wanted to join
together and sin~ fine music.

\

GLYNN ADDRESSES UPPER ALTON COUNCIL

.

Talking as "one neighbor to another,"
John J .. Glynn addressed the Upper Alton
Council of GAAC on February 5. He outlined the history of SID's residence centers and explained hmv "the need they
filled proved the necessity for a still
larger campus, such as is being planned
near Edwardsville."

c. E. Peebles uas in Atlantic City
February 14 and 15 u here he attended the
meeting of the American Association for
School Administrators.
Early in 1-larch, Dean Harold H. See
attended the national conference of the
Association for Higher Education. It vJas
held at the Pick-Conz;ress Hotel in Chicago.
EVALUATE CURRICULUH
Robert Steinkellner and David Bear
served on a team of educators \vho were
invited to assist the teachers, administrators and people of Edwardsville in the
evaluation of the mathematics-science
curriculum, equipment and instruction at
LeClair Elementary School.
Hary H. Brady and Joe R. Small helped
February 18 with an evaluation of the
business education courses in Edwardsville
Community School District 7.

COLLABORATES ON ACCOUNTING BOOK
Joe R. Small collaborated with a
number of other persons in writing Principles of Accountin~ published by Pitman.
The book is 596 pages long and Small's
contribution appears on pages 191 to 200.
ZURHEIDE' S HOVE
Freaer•ick H. Zurheide and his wife
. moved to their ne\·J home on Harch 7. Their
address is 409 Nevade1, Rosewood Heights,
East Alton. Their neH telephone number is
Hood River 9-2109

�- 5 -

FACULTY HONE N" S CLUB
The Harch 19 meeting of the Faculty
Women's Club has been changed from Rock
Springs Recreational Center to the Germania
Savings &amp; Loan Building, 543 East Broad\vay,
Alton. There is plenty of parking space
at qHe rear of the building. You are
asked not to park under the ramp, which
is r~served for customers. The -meetin g
will be held in Room 101 at one o'clock.
Featured at the guest tea will be
Mrs. Fral\lk Eversull, who will revie\v
Doctor ~hivago by Boris Pasternak. A
Book-of~The-Month selection and at the
top of the fiction list for weeks, Doctor
Zhivago is the first original work published by Pasternak after 25 years of
silence. "The only truly great novel to
come out of post-revolutionary Russia
significantly appears first in translation,
without the approval of the Ru?sian Communist Pa,rty censorship," according to
the publisher, Pantheon. "But this sensational aspect should not obscure the
fact that Doctor Zhivago is above all a
stupendously rich and moving book." Even
if they have read the book, members and
gues~s of the club are sure to enjoy Mrs.
Eversull's revieH and the opportunity of
discussing it with others.
THE INTER}ffiDIATE CHILD
Robert Steinkellner spoke March 4
to about 450 intermediate grade teachers
of Madison County. His subject was entitled "The Intermediate Child." Departmental chairman of the Americanism Committee, State of Texas Veterans of Forei gn
Wars, Steinkellner spoke March 8 on
Americanism at a meeting of District 14.
The meeting was in New Athens.

PONDER THESE QUESTIONS
*Greeting his pupils, the Master asked:
"What \vould you learn of me?"
And the reply came:

"How
How
How
How
How
For

shall \·Je care for our bodies ?
shall \ve rear our children?
shall we •wrk together?
shall \ve 1ive with our fellowmen?
shall \ve play?
what ends shall we live?"

And the teacher pondered these words, and
a deep sorrow was in his heart, for his
own learning touched not these things.
~·:chapman, James C. and Counts, George S.,
Principles of Education. Houghton-Mifflin
Co.; Cambridge, Mass., 1924, p. 645.

******************
Robert Steinkellner further asks:
How shall \ve live within ourselves?
How shall \ve learn to work by ourselves?
How shall \ve know "truth"?
How shall we judge that which is of
value?
How shall \ve, the children, find the
courage to judge and to challenge
accepted traditions and test them
for their truth?
How shall vJe know God?
How shall \ve learn to strive totally
to do our best work according to
our abilities so that we may find
pride in a job well done?
How, in the final analysis, shall
we evaluate our lives?
What is the purpose of living and
of dying?
(Do YOU teach and learn for these?)

�•

•·

.

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�J'1ARCH _,

Vo L. I V_, No . 6

1960

FACU L TY

NE £/S

Southern Illinois University
SOUTHWESTERN ILLINOIS CAMPUS

FILL SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS
DAVID BFAR, assistant professor of education (A), discussed "Trends in Teaching
the Social Studies in the Elementary School"
February 15 before the PTA at Highland Elementary School.. On March 14 he spoke to
the East Alton Classroom Teachers on "Let's
Teach All the Language Arts." Two days
later the Alton Elementary Principals' Association heard him on "Trends in Elementary Education." Earlier in the month Mr.
Bear attended a conference of the Supervision and Curriculum Department which met
in Washington, D. C.
REGAN CARPENTER, assistant professor of
education (A), addressed the teachers of
the East Alton School District on March 1
at a banquet given them by the Board of
Education. The meeting was held in East
Alton Junior High School. Carpenter spoke
on "The Preparation of Elementary Teachers."
STANLEY KIMBALL, assistant professor of
history (A), addressed a group March 4 at
the Bapti~t Church in Hartford. His topic
was concerned with Brotherhood Week. On
March 14 he spoke before the Alton Rotary
Club on "American Foreign Policy and the
Soviets." The talk was followed by a
question and answer period.
On February 16 CAMERON MEREDITH, professor
of psychology and special education (A),
addressed the Mark Twain PTA on "Helping
Parents and Teachers Understand Children."
At the April 8 meeting of the Alton Woman's
Council JOHN A. RICHARDSON, assistant professor of art (A), will discu.ss ',"The Viewpoint in Art." He will discuss the variety
of forms possible in traditional and avant
garde painting and ·will stress the many
positions the artist may take with regard
to the world of vision. The influence the

BULLi.,'TIN
Mildred Arnold, Editor
Fangenroth Road
Edwardsville, Illinois

spectator's own viewpoint may have upon
his assessment of the art work will also
be considered. The evening of the eighth,
Richardson will address the Alton Center's
French Club. He will present a 60-minute
slide lecture entitled "The 1'heme of the
Spectacle in Modern French Painting," a
discussion of the influence of commercially
and privately improvised forms of socializing upon French Impressionism and th e
movements that follow it. Richardson plans
to attend the Western Arts Association Convention in Dallas, Texas, from April 10 to
April 14.
VIRGIL SEYMOUR addressed the Belleville
Kiwanis Club March 22. His subject was
"The Importance of Citizen Participation
in Community Affairs." Seymour is instructor of sociology and supervisor of
the East St. Louis Evening College and
Adult Education Program.
JOE SMALL, associate professor of business
administration (E), spoke in Belleville
March 17 at a luncheon meeting of the East
Side Life Underwriters' Association on the
subject, "Tax Benefits Through Insurance
Planning." On March 9 he spoke to a
luncheon meeting of the Edwardsville Chamber
of Commerce on the subject of "Proposed
Social Security Legislation and its Effect
Upon Business."
DONALD TAYLOR, associate professor of
sociology (E), gave the major address
March 15 at the 1960 Cancer Society Dinner
held at Augustine's in Belleville .
The Edwardsville Chamber of Commerce is
conducting legislative seminars at its
weekly luncheons. · TQ.e purpose , of these
sessions is to discuss m~jor issues before
the United States Congress. On March 8
JOE SMALL, associate professor of business
administration (E), spoke on pending social

�- 2 -

security legislation and led the discussion
which followed. On March 15 H. BRUCE
BRUB~KER, professor of education and assistant to the Vice President for institutional research, discussed federal aid to
education. Mr. Brubaker was the speaker
March 23 at a special lenten service at
St. John's Methodist Church in Edwardsville.
Speaker at the Christian Women's Fellowship
meeting of the First Christian Church, East
St. Louis, April 14 will be J. BRUCE THOMAS,
assistant professor of sociology (E). His
topic, "Cultural Behavior: A Sociologist's
View of Why Humans Behave as They Do."
LEONARD B. WHEAT, associate professor of
education and assistant to the Dean for
graduate studies, has been the speaker
recently before three church congregations.
He has been a discussion leader on three
other occasions.

',

On March 7 LAWRENCE TALIANA, assistant
professor of guidance (A), discussed with
the teaching staff of the First Christian
Church of Edwardsville the "Importance of
Objectives in Teaching Christian Education."
Taliana and REGAN CARPENTER were the keynote speakers at the March 8 conference of
the Illinois Principals Association-Marquette Division held in Alton. Their topics
were concerned with "Evaluation and Reporting of Pupil Progress." Following the
program they led group discussions covering
the various methods reporting pupil progress to parents. During the past month
Taliana has been accepted as a member in
the American Personnel and Guidance Association, with additional membership in two
of its divisions: American College Personnel Association and the Division of Rehahilitatiop Counseling.
THE CHANGING WORLD
Two more programs remain in the SIU television series, The Changing World, which
began November 2 with a talk by Drew Pearson
of Washington Merry Go Round fame. Arrangements have been completed for the thirteenth
in the series which was not announced until

r ec ently. Set for April 4, it is called
"The New Age of Architecture" and is a
film recently made by Architectural Forum
magazine. The last in the series, "Language in Flux," will be seen on KETC-9 on
April 18.
Three of the programs have taken place
since the last issue of the Bulletin. On
February 29 JOHN RICHARDSON and WINSLOW
SHEA discussed modern art and architecture.
Both are from the Alton Center. Richardson
is assistant professor of art; Shea is
instructor in philosophy.
The March 7 participants included WILLIAM
C. SHAW~ professor of physics (E), ROBERT
SAlTZ, assistant professor of English (E),
and HOWARD PFEIFER, lecturer in botany (E).
They discussed "The World of Space," with
special emphasis upon the probability of
life on other planets.
"Problems in Higher Education" was the
theme of the March 21 round-table discussion.
Appearing with Vice President HAROLD W. SEE
and LEONARD 1.-JHEAT was Duncan Wimpress, newlyinaugurated president of Monticello College.

APPEARED ON PETERS SHOW
PETER SIMPSON, instructor in English (E),
discussed contemporary poetry on the noon
broadcast of the Charlotte Peters Show,
KSD-TV, March 9. On March 22 he discussed
"Contemporary Poetry and the American Public" on Booknotes, a St. Louis Public Library Production on KETC-TV.
WEDDING BELLS
ETHEL HALE, lecturer in secretarial science
and business education (A), and WALTER L.
BLACKLEDGE, professor of business management
(A), were married February 25 in Christ
Presbyterian Church, St. Louis. Theirhoneymoon was spent in Chicago and western Indiana.
The couple's article, "How to Move from High
School Teaching to College Teaching, appears
in the March issue of Business Education
World.

�- 3 TO JUDGE PLAYS
MARION TAYLOR, assistant professor of
English (A), has been asked to serve as
one of the judges for the one-act plays
submitted to the McKendree Writers' Contest, the winners to be announced at the
Writers' Conference in June.
Judges will
be asked to pick first and second prizes
and an honorable mention from the manuscripts that are deemed worthy, Mrs. Taylor
said.
TO ATTEND NUCLEAR ENERGY INSTITUTE
FREDERICK W. ZURHEIDE, instructor in
physics (A), will attend the Basic Summer
Institute on Nuclear Energy to be held for
two months this summer. The institute is
under the American Society for Engineering
Education and is paid for by the Atomic
Energy Commission. Most of the time
Zurheide will be at Purdue University; the
rest of the time at Argonne Laboratory
near Chicago. The AEC pays travel expenses
and wages for one month, while SIU will
match wages for the second month.
LANGUAGE FESTIVAL
Fourteen of BERTRAND BALL's French and
Spanish students participated in the first
annual language festival held in the auditorium of the Alton Center on February 13.
Eleven students recited an episode from
Saint Exupery's Le petit prince. Two students recited a conversation in French concerning history. One read the poem
Mediodia by the contemporary Mexican poet,
Jaime Torres Bodet. Ball is instructor of
foreign languages (A). In a recent news
release about the festival this information
was inadvertently omitted.
WITH DEEPEST SYMPATHY
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. PEEBLES wish to express
their sincere appreciation to the faculty
for the floral offering sent at the time
of the death of Mrs. Peebles' mother. We

are sorry for this loss that has come to
one of our families.
BASKETBALL JUDGE
The St. Louis Board of Women Officials has
announced the appointment of BABETTE MARKS
as basketball judge by the Women's National
Official's Rating Committee. As a basketball judge, she administers practical examinations in basketball officiating. Miss
Marks, assistant professor of physical
education for women (A), is co-chairman
of the Basketball Examining Committee of
the St. Louis Board and recently conducted
a basketball rules clinic and an officiating
workshop in St. Louis. Miss Marks has been
a nationally rated official in both basketball and volleyball for nine years.
ATTEND INTER-RACIAL CONFERENCE
THOMAS D. EVANS, supervisor of student
affairs at the East St. Louis Center, and
four of his students attended the Catholic
Inter-Racial Conference at the Sheraton
Towers, Chicago, March 26-27. They included
Patricia Lally, Doris Dillow, Frank Sagovac
and David Riester. There were 148 colleges
and universities represented at the conference, Evans said.
YEARBOOK COMMITTEE MEMBER
CAMERON W. MEREDITH, a member of the 1962
Yearbook Committee of the Association for
Supervision and Curriculum Development,
met with the committee in Washington, D. C.,
March S-9. Writing teams were organized
and plans were completed for the first
draft of the manuscript. This is the
second year the committee has met. The
Yearbook is devoted to how, through the
teaching-learning process, people can achieve more · self-actualization.
EXAMINES LETTERS
ROBERT DUNCAN, associate professor of

�- 4 English and supervisor of Alton's Evening
College and Adult Education, was in Austin,
Texas, early this month examining manuscript letters to William Jordan at the
University of Texas library. Jordan was
an early nineteenth-century editor of a
British literary weekly.

are 10:45 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. Monday through
Friday ; the snack bar, supplying soup and
sandwiches, are 7:00a.m. to 8:00p.m.
Monday through Thursday. According to
MILDRED TRABUE, supervisor of food service,
HERBERT DREIFKE, lecturer in English (A),
was the first to go through the line of
the new cafeteria.

TO READ PAPERS
ANOTHER FIRST
CHARLES PARISH will read a paper on Matthew
Arnold's touchstone theory of poetry at
the Midwest Modern Language Association at
the University of Kansas, April 28-30.
Parish is assistant professor of English
(A). At the same conference JOHN ADES,
instructor in English (A), will read a
paper on Milton's Comus.

The SOU'WESTER made its first appearance on
the Alton campus March 2. MARION TAYLOR
and NICHOLAS JOOST served as editors of
this new literary magazine published by
the writing class of English 392. Some
of the contributions were from outside the
class.

MATH CONSULTANTS

TO HOLD CLINICS

ERIC STURLEY and MYLLAN SMYERS were the
mathematics consultants March 2 at a high
school conference at Civic Memorial High
School, Bethalto. Sturley is associate
professor of mathematics (A) and Smyers
is associate professor of secondary education (A). SIU's President DELYTE W. MORRIS
was one of the speakers. Ernest Weinke,
former lecturer in education (A), was chairman of the mathematics group. Theme of the
conference was "Education in the 60's-Threat or A Promise?"

The Adjutant General of the Illinois
National Guard has asked JAMES DIEKROEGER,
instructor in physical education for men
(E), to advise the revamping of the existing physical and athletic facilities at
the National Guard building in East St.
Louis.

LLOYD BLAKELY (A) and DALE FJERSTAD (E),
assistant professors of music, will hold
clinics April 5 in conjunction with the
Jersey County Band Festival at J~ rseyville.
Blakely will conduct one in wooq~inds,
Fjerstad in brass. The two took part in the
Madison County Band Festival March 2 at
Triad High School, St. Jacob. They will
serve as judges for the Illinois district
and state finals of the music festival
contest. Last month Blakely and Fjerstad
attended the annual convention of the Illinois Music Educators Conference in ChampaignUrbana and the biennial meeting of the North
Central Division of the College Band Directors National Association which was held in
Bloomington, Indiana. On March 18 Blakely
gave a paper before the National Conference
of State Supervisors of Music at the biennial
meeting of the Music Educators National Conference held in Atlantic City. He discussed
the status, duties and services of the state
supervisor of music.

ALTON CAFETERIA OPEN

PRESENTS PROGRAMS

The cafeteria in the newly-decorated Student Union at the Alton Center was officially opened March 3. Cafeteria hours

KENWYN BOLDT, piano ins t ructor (A), has
been giving a series of programs this mopth
in the Alton Public Schools. On the tw&lt;inty-

DIEKROEGER TO ADVISE

�- 5 -

second he played at Humboldt and Garfield
schools, at the Clara Barton School the
twenty-four~h, and at Irving School the
twenty-ninth. He and his wife, Frina, were
featured soloists with the Collinsville
High School Band on the twenty-fourth. On
March 11 Boldt also conducted one of the
sessions of the First Annual Piano Teachers
Clinic which was held in Alton.
PRESENTS PAPER AT CARBONDALE
ROBERT McDANIEL, instructor in business
(E), presented a paper at the Phi Delta
Kappa Field Day held at SIU's Carbondale
campus March 12. "Work Experiences-Business Education in the Southern Illinois
High Schools" was the title of the paper.
Later in the day McDaniel participated in
a panel discussion on "High School Seniors'
Job Preference and Student Employment."
CONDUCT WORKSHOP
DONALD TAYLOR and VIRGIL SEYMOUR conducted
a one-day workshop on mental illness at
the Synod of the E and R Church, Dupo, on
March 24.
JUDGE ESSAYS
ROBERT ERICKSON, assistant professor of
history (E), and ROBERT STEINKELLNER,
assistant professor of elementary education
(E), were members of a judging panel for an
essay contest sponsored by the Collinsville
Veterans of Foreign Wars which was held
March 13. Essays written by high school
students concerned "Civil Defense and
American Tradition."
ARTICLES PUBLISHED
MARY M. BRADY is the author of a Machine
Calculation Test which was published this
month by the United Business Education
Association. It is a two-hour performance
test to measure efficiency on either a
rotary or key-driven calculator. The test

will be used as one of a battery of five
in business subjects. These tests will
be given to students in business education
throughout the country this spring. Miss
Brady is associate professor of secretarial
science and business education (A).

"On Society and Art Education," an article
by EVELYN BUDDEMEYER who is lecturerinstructor of art (A), was published in
the bulletin Art Education, A Resource
Guide. The bulletin is issued by the Office
of the Superintendent of Public Instruction,
State of Illinois. Mrs. Buddemeyer is a
contributing committee member for the Illinois State Art Education.
The forthcoming issue of the Vocational
Guidance Quarterly will carry an article
by HOWARD V. DAVIS, director of student
affairs for SWIC and assistant professor
of education, entitled "Who Are the Guidance
Workers in the Schools of Illinois?" It is
a study of the persons who do guidance work
in the Illinois public schools to determine
if the people are trained in the field of
guidance and counseling or if they have
been assigned guidance duties regardless of
training.
A lecture given last November by ALFRED
KUENZLI, associate professor of psychology
(A), at the Unitarian Church in Alton appears in the current issue of Unity magazine. It concerns the Dewey centennial.
In introducing EDWIN B. WARREN's recent
publication, The Masses of Robert Fayrfax
(1464-1521), Armen Carapetyan, general
editor of The American Institute of Musicology, has written: "Fayrfax may safely
be regarded as one of the great figures,
though least known, of English music. He
is an important link between Dunstable and
the later Tudor composers. His works as
such are of immense interest and worth."
None of Fayrfax's music was printed during
his lifetime and practically none has been
published since. Therefore, his music has
been almost entirely inaccessible and unknown, along with most of the English music
from about 1450 to 1525. Warren's edition

�- 6 -

of the complete works of Fayrfax from the
original manuscripts of the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries will help fill this
gap in English musical history and as such
will be of major musicological importance.
The Masses, which represents the largest
segment of Fayrfax's music, is the first of
three volumes. The second, containing the
rest of his sacred music, is in progress,
as is a stylistic analysis of the music to
appear in the next issue of Musica Disciplina, A Yearbook of the History of Music.
Warren is associate professor of music (A).
WILLIAM F. BANAGHAN, assistant professor of
guidance and supervisor of student affairs
at Alton, is co-author of an article entitled "Staff Development" which appears in
the March issue of Mental Hospitals, hospital journal of the American Psychiatric
Association. At the time the article was
written, Banaghan and the co-author, Hugh
McLean, were serving as clinical psychologists on the staff of Napa State Hospital
in Imola, California. The article is concerned with staff development programs for
state hospitals.

WHAT IS AN AMERICAN?
"What is an American?" was the title of
a recording by ROBERT STEINKELLNER heard
over KMOX March 7.
WORLD AFFAIRS FORUM
More than 200 persons attended the first
World Affairs Forum sponsored by the Social
Studies Division at the Alton Center on
February 1. Topic of discussion was "How
We Lost the War in Central Europe and What
We Can Do About It." Panelists were MELVIN
KAZECK, associate professor of geography;
STANLEY B. KIMBALL, assistant professor of
history; DIMITER WASSEN, associate professor
of economics and business management; and
KURT GLASER, lecturer in government. HYMAN
FRANKEL, assistant professor of sociology,
was moderator. Additional forums are
planned "as a contribution toward creating
the informed public opinion necessary to

support effective United States foreign
policy." (This item was inadvertently
omitted from the February Bulletin. Ed.)
ARNOLD RECEIVES SCIENCE GRANT
GEORGE ARNOLD, instructor in physics (E),
has received word from Dr. Edward U. Condon,
head of the physics department at Washington
University, that he has been awarded a
National Science Foundation grant to attend
the Academic Year Institute at Washington
University.
In addition to a stipend, the
grant includes tuition and books. Arnold
is currently enrolled in two courses at
Washington University. Under the grant he
would study full-time next year.

EDITS MARCH FABLES
The University of Alabama Press has just
released a book edited by DEAN WILLIAM T.
GOING, ~9 fables by William March, author
of The Bad Seed. The delightful illustrations are by Richard Brough, a member of
the art faculty at the University of Alabama.
Introduction to the book was written also
by Mr. Going.
At the time of March's death, the longest
manuscript still in his possession was a
collection of fables which he had completed
for the first time in 1938. March culled
and rewrote, polished and revised, always
finding them "too good to destroy," yet
never finding them a good venture for a
commercial publisher. Now, posthumously,
the collectio.n appears in this book and
readers can enjoy the fabulous world of
William March. The fables "are an immediate
delight and everyone will find many favorites
among the 99. But in the end, March's view
of the world is a hard one,and the morals,
however charmingly expressed, are bitter
enough to rival the themes of his novels.
As a matter of fact, it is an echo of the
theme of his novels that the 99 fables take
on a special significance, according to
the editor. He says they form a sort of
writer's notebook of ideas. "They will be
read less for clues to March's philosophy

�- 7 -

than because the individual stories are
superb, the themes meaningful, and the
cumulative effect powerful." Dean Going
was on the faculty of the Department of
English; at the University of Alabama before
joining the SIU staff.

tative plans call for Dr. Bunche to speak
at 3:00p.m. at the Alton High School, with
a reception at the YWCA immediately following. Dr. Bunche is especially well-known
for solving the Arab-Jew crisis in the Holy
Land shortly after World War II. He and
his wife will stay with re l atives living
in Alton.

JOOST AND THE DIAL
FACULTY WOMEN'S CLUB
In his report to the trustees and corporation of the Worcester Art Museum, Daniel
Committee members for the Faculty Women's
Catton Rich said in the latest issue of
guest tea March 17 are to be congratulated
Worcect er Art Museum Annual, VII (1959),
for a very successful meeting. Even the
vi: "Our most ambitious exhibition of the
weatherman cooperated and the turnout was
year was The Dial and The Dial Collection.
large. Guests included ten from the CarbonThis grew out of an idea long cherished by
dale campus: MRS. DELYTE W. MORRIS, MRS.
Francis Taylor that the extensive collecCHARLES TENNEY, MRS. H. R. LONG, MRS. C. E.
tion of art as well as the files of The
SKINNER, MRS. J. W. NECKERS, MRS. KENNETH
Dial magazine should be studied as a reMILLER, MRS. CLARENCE STEVENS, MRS. HARVEY
flection of the taste of the 1920's. With
FISHER, MRS. FRANK STAMBERG and MRS. A. R.
this in mind, he secured from the Bollingen
MacMILLAN (president of the Faculty Women's
Foundation a grant for Dr. NICHOLAS JOOST
Club at Carbondale). Mrs. Walter Collins,
. . . to prepare a volume on this subject
a member of SIU's Board of Trustees, was
and planned that the museum should hold an
exhibition and a seminar and issue a cataalso a guest. Miss Louise Travous of Edlogue which would be of permanent value in
wardsville was the speaker. Her interestthe history of art in America. Mr. Taylor's ing talk concerned the history of the area.
project was carried out, and to The Dial
Members of the committee were: MRS. ALFRED
material was added a group of works not in
KUENZLI (chairman), MRS. JOHN ADES, MRS. R.
the collection but borrowed from museums
J. SPAHN, MRS . WILLIAM T. GOING, MRS. LYMAN
and private collectors to illustrate further HOLDEN, MRS. REGAN CARPENTER, MRS. CAMERON
the range of reproductions which the magaMEREDITH, MRS. H. H. SMITH and MRS. J.
zine printed during its . adventurous decade
EDMUND WHITE.
of 1920-29. So that the summer visitors
to New England may have a chance to see
The April 21 meeting will convene at l:OOp.m.
this unique exhibition, it was scheduled
for a tour of Owens-Illinois Company. If
to extend until September 8, 1959." Joost,
you are not on the monthly telephone list
who is associate professor of English (A),
and wish to take advantage of this tour,
not only did the preparatory work on the
get in touch with a member of the telephone
papers associated with the Dial Collection,
committee, MRS. DAVID VAN HORN (HOward
he contributed a "Chronology" of The Dial
2-1665) or MRS. PETER NITTOLO (HOward 5-4320).
to the exhibition catalogue and wrote the
The telephone committee : Alton--MRS. JOHN
history, using the hitherto unclassified
ADES, HOward 5-4305; MRS. PETER NITTOLO,
materials in the Thayer estate.
HOward 5-4320; MRS. FREDERICK ZURHEIDE,
CLinton 9-2109; MRS. JOHN SCHNABEL, HOward
5-3283.
TO HONOR RALPH BUNCHE
Edwardsville: MRS. JOE SMALL, 3767
SIU and five major area organizations are
Belleville: MRS. GENE GRAVES, ADams 4-7593
planning a program April 9 honoring Ralph
MRS. JAMES DIEKROEGER, ADams 4-4495
Bunche, undersecretary of the United Nations, Collinsville: MRS. ROBERT STEINKELLNER,
renound scholar and social scientist. TenDickens 4-0691

�- 8 -

East St.Louis: MRS. JOSEPHS. DAVIS,
EXpress 7-3155
St. Louis: MRS. NORBERT SCHMITT, IVanhoe
7-5829
LIONS CLUB SPONSORS SIU MEETING
The Lions Club of Edwardsville is sponsoring
an April 26 meeting of persons from the
entire hi-county area interested in higher
education to hear President Delyte W. Morris
and Vice President Harold W. See speak on
the develo.p ment of the Southwestern Illinois
Campus. The 75-piece SWIG concert band will
make its second public appearance of the
season under the direction of C. ,DALE
FJERSTAD.

April 13, 9:30 to 4:30
Girl Scouts of America
EXECUTIVE POSITIONS FOR WOMEN
April 19, 9:00 to 4:00 P.M.
Continental Baking Company
SALES TRAINEES
EAST ST. LOUIS CAMPUS
April 5, 9:00 to 12:00
Union Bag-Camp Corp.
SALES TRAINEE
April 7, 9:00 to 11:30 A.M.
Illinois Bell Telephone
COLLEGE WOMEN

April 12, 9:00 to 4:00 P.M.
Admi s sion to the program, to be held in
Internal Revenue Service
the Edwardsville High School gymnasium at
REVENUE AGENTS
8:00 p.m., will be by ticket, obtainable
without cost from Information Service (ext.
If you wish to talk with any or all of
215 or 216, Edwardsville) or from the Lions
these representatives, please contact
Club (P. 0. Box 55, Edwardsville). Staff
the PLACEMENT OFFICE for an appointment.
members are invited to come and bring guests.
The program's sponsors hope to fill the
2 , 000-person auditorium.
(There will be
no collection or donation requested.)
PLACEMENT SERVICE DATES
The following employers will be interviewing at the Placement Service on the dates
and times indicated.
ALTON CAMPUS
April 5, 1:30 to 5:00P.M.
Union Bag-Camp Corp.
SALES TRAINEE
April 7, 1:30 to 4:00P.M.
Illinois Bell Telephone
COLLEGE WOMEN
April 8, 9:00 to 4:00 P.M.
Internal Revenue Service
REVENUE AGENTS

�,.

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