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                    <text>Southvvestern Illinois Residence Centers
Southern Illinois University

FACULTV

'

NEWS

BULLETIN

�J1AY_,_

J9 59

Vo L,..

F AC ULTY

N E WS

II, No •. 7

B U LL E TI N
Mildred Arnold, Editor
Room 227, Broadview Hotel Bridge 4- 2100, ext. 3

TEACHING BASEBALL TECHNIQUES
Members of the physical education class
in Baseball Techniques at the Alton Center are getting some practical work in
this field. The \·] estern Cartridge Company has made its baseball facilities on
Route 140, Alton, available to the class.
Each 3aturday morning from 9:00 to 10:30
Howard C. Nesbitt teaches baseball techniques. From 10:30 until noon, children
of the Western Cartridge Company's employees are "students" of the SIU physical education majors. There were 24
children on hand the first Saturday and
the number has increased since news of
the pro.gram was publicized in the company
newspaper. According to Nesbitt, teams
will probably be formed and league play
developed .
TAKES PART IN

..

FO~EIGN

LANGUAGE CONFERENCES

Ruth Kilchenmann read a paper entitled
"Les Portraits dans Ramuz" at the twelfth
University of Kentucky Foreign Language
Conference at Lexington April 23-25. On
May 1-2 she took part in the Central
States Modern Language Teachers Association meetinG in St. Louis. She presente d
a paper in the German section called
"Limits and Possibilities of Literary
Interpretation in the Teaching of Forei 0n
Languages." · (Also attending the meetinG
in St. Louis was Ray Spahn.)

Soviet Union last summer . "Their color
slides and personal observations reports
on both industry and agriculture in Russia
stimulated more questions than time permit ted them to ans11er. The four were able
to visit the new oil fields in southeast
Russia and also the nevl agricultural lands
of Siberia."
A BELATED NEWS ITEH
This item about Stephanie B. Conwell was
received too late for inclusion in the
last Faculty News Bulletin. Miss Conwell
was a guest speaker at the monthly InService Education meeting at St. Hary's
Hospital, Alton, on Larch 17. About 35
graduate nurses on the staff attended the
meeting and heard Hiss Conwell discuss
"Nurse's Concept of Self versus Public
Image. 11

DONAL MYER MOVES TO EAn

ALTON

Donal Myer and his &gt;-life have moved to 550
Nevada, Rose1vood Hei c hts, East Alton. Their
new telephone number is 9-2453.

GOINGS MOVE
Mr. and Mrs. \,Ji lliam T. Going have moved
to 516 Summit in Alton.

ATTENDS i'-1EETINGS IN PITTSBURGH
Melvin E. Kazeck attended the Association
of American Geographers meetings in
Pittsburgh f"!:'om ]'larch 29 through April 1.
Highlights of the meetings, according to
Kazeck, were papers given by four professors who were percitted to vi~it the

BEAR

PA..~TICIPATES

I N CAREER COUNSELING

At Alton Senior Hi c h School's Career Night,
held April 17, David E. Bear spoke to two
groups of students and parents on the career
of teaching. On May 5 he participated in
Career Day at the Southwestern Unit #9 High

�2

School at Piasa, presenting the same
subject, teachin g .

attended. Thomas D. Evans took four students from the South\..restern Illinois •Campus.

EDUCATION CLASS ATTENDS MEETING AT BRADLEY

GUEST EDITOR

H. H. Smith's Education 456 class, Educational Supervision, attended the annual
meeting of the Illinois Association for
Supervision and Curriculum Development
held this year at Bradley University. The
meeting was a tHo-day affair, Apri 1 2L;- 25 ,
and the cl a ss of 20 students attended the
April 25 sessions.

Robert H. Ste inke llne r, as guest editor,
had an article published in the April .
issue of TEXAS VFH NEHS. An 11-pcrge
article by Steinkellner, "The Needs of
Children as Children,'' was published in
SCHOOL AND COMMUNITY, the Missouri State
Teachers Association's monthly magazine.

PRESENTS THIRD SCHOL!u';.SHIP AWARD
ATTEND WORKSHOP DIRECTORS CONFERENCE
In preparation for the Community Re·sourcc s
Workshop which \vill be held at Alton thi s
summer, David E. Bear and Mary M. Brady
attended the Annual Conference of Horkshop
Directors held thi s year at Michigan State
University. Bear will direct the Educational Utilization of Community Resources
Workshop (!une 22 to July 31). Miss Brady
will serve as assistant director and J ohn
J. Glynn as coordinator.
EXHIBIT DP-1\\JS EUCII ATTENTION
During the observance last month of
National Library f~ek, the exhibit of
faculty publications on display at the
ARC library dreH a great deal of attentio n
from both faculty and students, accordinG
to Harriet J. Scheldrup, assistant libr arian. Publications ranged from such subjects as ''1-liss Hetz el 1 s Nose'' to "Lincoln
and the Question of Slavery in the District
of Columbia. 11

ADDRESSES ENGINEERING SOCIETY

•

Frank L. Eversull was principal speaker
at a recent dinner meeting of the Illinoi s
Society of Profes s ional Engineers. Held
at the Wishbone Restaurant in Belleville
April 21, the meeting was designed to
stimulate interest in engineering and provide information about the field. Youn r;
men from area hiGh s chools and colleges

The 'tlarry Hayes Smith~' s cholarship was
established in 1957 by the Faculty Service Club of the East Alton-Wood River
Community High School. The third presentation of the award Has made April 23 by
Mr. Smith to David l\pple o.f East Alton.
One of the previous winners· of this $500
scholarship is nm..r a student at McKendree
College; the other was a freshman last
year at the Universit y of Illinois. Smith
is a former member of the faculty at the
East Alton- Wood River school. He also
taught at Washing ton University, &gt;..rhere he
received his doctor o f education degree.
Smith received hi s bachelor of arts degree
from James Millikin University and his
master of arts de gree from the University
of Illinois.

DISCUSSES PROS Al'lD CONS
Leonard \~eat discussed the advantages and
disadvantages of a lonGer school year at
the April 29 meetin r; of the Southwestern
Division of the Illinois Association of
School Boards. The meeting was held in
Bethalto.

ATTEND WORKSHOP
Babette Marks and Jane s Diekroeger attended
the Southwest Distric t \oJorkshop of the
Illinois Association f or Health, Physical
Education and Recreation held at Mascoutah
on April 24. Ruth Toomey, call staff,

�- J -

took her clas s in Elementary Physical
Education Nethods. An interesting side light was the fact that members of the
methods class attended voluntarily.

HOST TO ILLINOIS BAPTIST STUDENT MOVEMENT
j

The Shurtleff Baptist Foundation Center
was host to the Illinois Baptist Student
Movement for college students on May 8 and
9. Nearly fifty registered delegates attended the sessions of the spring convocation, Kenneth F. Estey, foundation director,
reports.

EDITS BOOK
Alfred Kuenzli has edited a book, THE
PHENOMINOLOGICAL PROBLEM, which will be
published by Harper &amp; Brothers this fall.
The book is concerned with scholarly
papers in the fields of personality and
social psychology.

ATTEND MATH llEE Tii'!G'

-.

A joint meetin G of the Missouri Council
of Teachers of Na.thematics and the Hathematical Association of America \vas held
April 25 at Lindenwood College. Among
those attending were Florence Fanning,
Hilliam Probst, Eric Sturley and Arnold
Seiken.

director of the E. IL Eoore ·Company,
supplier of physical education uniforms.
According to Babette Harks, major students
in women's physical education are taking
advantage of the demonstration by planning
a picnic for hi gh schoo 1 senior women 1-7ho
will be attending SIU this fall.

REPRESENTS CENTERS AT l1USICOLOGICAL SOCIETY
Edwin B. h7arren represented the residence
centers at the sprins meeting of the Midwest Chapter of the A7&lt;erican Musicological
Society in St. Louis llay 1-3. . . Accompanied by her husband, Linda Warren sang
for the Illinois Sta.te Baptist Convention
in Wood River April 25.
PAPERS ON WAR AND PEACE
Research papers by Alfred E. Kuenzli and
Peter C. Nittolo have been accepted for a
symposium in the area of war and peace
which will be held this summer at the convention of the American Psychological
Association in Cincinnati. Kuenzli's
topic is "The ImaGe as a Factor in InterNation Conflicts"; Nittolo will speak on
"The Reduction of Inter-Nation Conflicts
Through Economic Uni f ication." Hyman
Frankel is serving as a consultant on
both projects.

SEYMOUR ADDRESSES GROUPS
DIEKROEGER 1\D:t-UNISTElUNG BASEBALL CLINIC
James L. Diekroeger originated and is
a city-wide baseball clinic
devoted to teaching fundamental knowled ge
and skills of that sport to boys from four
junior high schools in East St. Louis.
Diekroeger is a full-time member of the
East St. Louis Social Planning Council.
administerin ~

•

THE HISTORY OF GYH SUITS TO BE DEHONSTRATED
A demonstration of the history of gym suits
will be given May 15 by the educational

Virgi 1 Seymour spoke t o the Willard Haller
Sociology Club at Carbondale on April 21-his subject, "Teachin~&gt;; Sociology on TV."
On April 27 he talked to the Retirement
Class at the Granite City Engineering
Depot about "Social Adjustment and Old Age."

ATTEND THREE-DAY

CO~VENTION

The Midwest Economic Association held a
three-day convention April 16-18 at the
Hotel Statler in St. Louis. Such subjects
as labor economics, statistics, money and
b anking and accountin ~&gt;; were covered at the

�-

conference. Attending from the Alton
Residence Center \llere John Glynn, Joseph
Bird, Norbert Schmitt, Peter Nittolo and
Virgil Pinkstaff.
0

NIGHT NUMBERS
For your convenience in contacting the
offices at Alton and East St. Louis, \·Je
are listinG night numbers to be used
after the switchboard is closed.
ALTON:
2-0001
2-0001
2-0001
2-0002
2-000 2

Evening College Office
Book Store
Registrar
Business Office
Student Affairs
Cafeteria
Pioneer Lodge
Davis Lodge
Director
Physical Plant

2-ood2
2-0003
2-0003
2-0003
2-0003

EAST ST. LOUIS:
Business Office
Dean of Instruction
Vice President
Director
Registrar
Student Affaire
Technical and Adult
Education
Information Service

BRidge
BRidg(:!
BRidge
BRidge
BRidge
BRidge

4-1404
4-0954
4-095lf
4-ll27
4-1554
4-160 lf

UPton
UPton

4-6500
4-6500

SUMS UP GOALS OF EDUCATION
Joseph C. Jurjevich, Jr., attended the
21st Annual Public Affairs Conference
held at Principia College April 16-18.
He acted as advisor to four students from
the Alton Residence Center who participated
in this all-student conference. Theme of
the conference was "American Youth: A
Resource in the Space Age. 11 More than 40
universities and colleges sent delegates
to the affair. In attendance were students
from West Point, the Air Academy, Texas
A &amp; M, the University of Southern California, and many others.

l;. -

The commission in general summed up
the goals of education as follows: helping
develop the individual to his potentialities; sharpening his reasoning, analytical
and communicative abilities; acquiring
cultural and refined v alues of life; and
teaching him to be a national and international citi z en.
PREPARING REPORT
Ernest L. Boyd is preparing a report on
the 11 Effect of Increased Enrollments on
Methods of Teachins the Basic Speech Course 11
for the Undergraduat e Instruction Interest
Gcoup of the Speech Acs ociation of America.
NEW ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER
Lloyd E. Hubert is the new assistant business manager at the East St. Louis Center.
He replaces Lionel D. Howell, who resigned
last month to accept a position as business
manager of William .Hoods College in Fulton,
Missouri. Hubert comes to Southern from
American Zinc, Lead &amp; Smelting Company,
where he was agsistant office· manager and
accountant.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT NEl\TS
Robert Knittel, assistant director of the
Department of Community Development was
elected secretary of the Division of Community Development of the Naticnal University
Extension Associat-ion at a convention held
in Syracuse, New Yo.r k, on Apri 1 30.
A recent survey bf the polio situation
in East St. Louis uncovered the fact that
only 30 per cent of the children in the most
dangerous age group, 1 'to 6, had had polio
shots. Only 29 per cen t in all age groups
had received the recommended three vaccine
shots. Alarmed at this situation, the Health
Committee of Community Progress, Inc.~ initiated a polio drive. Other area civic
organizations have joined Community Progress
in the campaign to combat polio in this area.
The Community Development Department of SIU
is working with the local organization of
CPI in a total community development program
in East St. Louis.

�Signs will be posted at each entrance .

•

~Collinsville

YOU ARE INVITED TO THE FACULTY PICNIC

Belleville

A faculty picnic, sponsored by the Southern Illinois University Women's Club
of the Southwestern Illinois Campus, will be held Saturday, May 16, from 4:30 to
7:30 p.m. at Kendall Hill Park (owned by Shell Oil Company). A map indicating
directions is shown above.
Each family should bring a large main dish, a dessert, meat for their family,
a beverage for their children, a tablecloth and table service. Coffee and extra
meat for bachelors are being arranged for by the committee. So, you single men,
don't disappoint us.
Excellent playground facilities are available for the children and there is
a large shelter in the event of rain. Bring the family and join the fun.

•
•

COFFEE HOUR SCHEDULED
On Thursday, May 14, the Women's Club will hold an important meeting at the
home of Mrs. Donald Q. Harris, 71 Country Club Place, Belleville. The meeting
is to be a coffee hour from 9:00 to 11:00 a.m. There will be election of officers,
proposed amendments, and an open panel discussion on the agenda.

�•

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                    <text>Vol.l, No.4

November 1, 1957
Co~piled

weekly by Information Service, Southwestern Illinois Residence Office,
Southern Illinois University, for the staff members of the Residence Centers, the
Newsletter is made possible by the cooperation of staff members who have contributed
news items.

------------------------F-A-C-U-L-T-Y

N-E-W-S-L-E-T-T-E-R

Dr. Carlyle Ring, Director, East St. Louis, served as lay r~I&gt;t:e~eqtative of
the Congregational Christian Church Tuesday evening at a fellowship banquet in
Belleville to discuss the recent merger of the Evangelical and Reformed Church with
the Congregational Church. There are about 45 E &amp; R churches in the area and eight
Congregational, and this was the first of a series of meetings planned to bring representatives of the churches together "to make acquaintances across old denomination ~!
lines," according to Ring.
'
In June, 1956, Dr. and Mrs. Ring attended the general conference of the Congregational Church in Omaha, which took the first vote favoring the merger of the two
churches into the United Church of Christ. Ring was elected as a delegate to the
general synod session of the two churches in Cleveland last year, where · the merger
was consumated, but due to his coming to SIU, he was unable to attend.

Open House at the Rings
Dr. and Mrs. Ring will be at home to the staff members of the East St. Louis
Residence Center this coming Sunday afternoon from five to seven. The Rings live
at 4308 South Park Drive in Belleville.

------------------------Howard V. Davis. student affairs, Alton, will participate in a Citizens' Advisory Group on Education in Brentwood, Nissouri, Monday, November 4. Topic: "Marking
Systems". The group will consider the relative merits of various kinds of marking,
with a view to finding an over-all marking system for kinC.ergarten through grade
twelve.
Howard will talk on "Psychological and Educational Factors Related to Grades".
Sharing the platform as co-specialist with Howard will be Charles A. Lee of Washington
University, who will discuss "The History, Tradition, and Trends in Grading".
.

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

\

�- 2 Staff members meet with industrial and labor leaders. ~:lve_members of the
advisory committe f
the annual workshop in Educational Ut1l1zat1on of Community
Resources met yes~er~:y with officials of Southern I~linois University to discuss
the merits of the summer workshop held for teachers 1n the Alton area.
A. A. Schweighauser, Laclede Steel Company manag~r of.industrial relations,
responsible for introducing the idea of the work~hop 1n th~s area mor~ than two
years ago, presided at the meeting held at the M1neral Spr1ngs Hotel ln Alton.
SIU's Executive Dean Harold l&gt;J. See, coordinator of last summer's workshop,
sponsored by Southern Illinois University, urged the committee to complete before
Christmas any major planning for the next summer workshop.
· David Bear, instructor in education, SIU, and assistant director of last
summer's workshop, distributed materials compiled by the five groups participating
in this past summer's workshop, concerned with educational community resources,
farm resources, job opportunities, social service, and tax study.
In addition to the studies made in these areas, the workshop compiled the
following directories and inventories: "A Study of the Social . Agenc,ies in the
Greater Alton Area"; "Educational Community Resources - Films, Filmstrips, Pamphlets,
Displays, Speakers, and Tours"; and "A Survey of the Diversified Job Opportunities
in the Greater Alton Area." Bear announced that these materials are available to
anyone in the area through his office at SIU's Alton Residence Center.
The following members of the committee told how their schools utilized the
materials made available by the workshop: District 15 School Superintendent Glenn
0. DeAtley and Assistant Superintendent Orville 0. Brunjes, Wood River; District 13
School Superintendent Charles T. Gabbert, East Alton; District 1 School Superintendent
Latham Harris, Roxana; District 11 School Superintendent James B. Johnson and administrative assistants Macy Pruitt and Raymond Ready, Alton; and District 8 School
.
Superintendent Wilbur R. Trimpe, Bethalto.
Committee members representing labor and industry were Truman Davis, Alton
Paper Workers; Robert Husmann, Laclede Steel Company training director; and J, S.
Kovic, employment and community relations supervisor, Olin Mathieson Chemical
Corporation. Other representatives of labor and industry at the meeting were
Buddie Davis, United Steel Workers of America; Robert Homer, Owens-Illinois Glass
Company training director; and Francis M. Karr, executive secretary, Greater Alton
Association of Commerce.
Also invited to the meeting were Dr. Eric R. Baber, director, SIU's Alton
Residence Center; and Chelsea Bailey, SIU's supervisor of adult and technical
education.

------------------------Dr. Frank Eversull, education, East St. Louis, told the East St. Louis Residence
Center's first indoor assembly last week about European education. Dr. Eversull,
former SIU Board of Trustees member and former principal of East Saint Louis High
School, spent the past summer visiting European schools.
He stressed the Eu:opean student's thirst for knowledge and his avid study of
lang~ages.
Eversul~ sa1d. that ~he European student realizes that a knowledge of
fore1gn languages g1.ves h1m a d1rect contact with the source:&gt;of information not
available to the student who knows only his own language.

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

�------ - - 3 -

Mary Wyatt, nursing, East St. Louis, Alton, and Carbondale, addressed the
E~st St · Louis Rotary Club this past Hednesday · Introduced by Rotarian Carlyle
R~ng, she told about the nurses' program started by SIU at Carbondale, Alton, and
East St. Louis.
Miss Wyatt came to SIU this Fall from Washin~ton University's .school of Nu:sing.
At East St. Loui
h t
hes a course in the bas~c (four-year degree) program ~n
s s e eac
.
d . .
· " ·
h R
nursing. At Alton she teaches "Introduction to Nurs~ng A m~n~strat~on ~n t e
N
supplementary program. (This is the third SIU staff member to address.the East
St. Louis Rotary Club this month. Rotary members have threatened to f~ne program
chairman-of-the-month See for advertising. - ed.)

------------------------Five 18th century arias by Allesandro Scarlatt~, three of them unheard since
the composer's death 232 years ago, will be sung by Contralto Nell Tangemann in a
recital at Southern Illinois University ~.Jednesday (Nov. 6).
· · · ·· '·
The program, which also will feature Pianist-Harpsichordist Claude Chiasson
as accompanist and soloist, will begin at 8:15p.m. in SIU's Alton Residence Center
auditorium and is free to the public. The same program will be given at the University of Chicago on November 8.
Historical research has failed to reveal any evidence that the Scarlatti arias
have been performed publicly since 1725. They were discovered in the archives of
Florence and Venice, Italy last year and have been edited by Musicologist John
Edmunds. Miss Tangemann, one of America's best-known contralto soloists, who joined
the SIU music department this year, will be recreating the arias as they were performed in the 18th century.
In addition to the Scarlatti works and two selections by Henry Purcell,
"I Attempt from Love's Sickness to Fly, " and the recitative and lament from "Dido
and Aeneas," Miss Tangemann will sing a group of modern compositions by Milhaud,
Norman Dello Joio, Theodore Chanler and Ned Rorem. She is most noted as a singer
of contemporary vocal music, a field in which her "musicianship, interpretative
sensibility and understanding " . have been praised.
Chiasson, Miss Tangemann's professional New York accompanist, will play three
harpsichord solos: Handel's "Chaconne inC sharp minor"; three sonatas by Domenico
Scarlatti, and "The Lonely l.Jayfarer," an early American composition.

David R. VanHorn of Park College joined the staff of Southern Illinois University this week as assistant registrar. VanHorn, who has been assistant director of
admissions at Park College in Missouri for the past three years, will be in charge
of the registrar's office at SIU's East St. Louis Residence Center.
He took his undergraduate work at Panhandle A &amp; M College, Goodwell, Oklahoma,
and his graduate work at the University of Kansas City and Oklahoma State University,
. Sti llwe 11.
VanHorn, a native of Pennsylvania, is married and has two children. He saw
service with the 38th $tatistical Control Unit of the Far Eastern Air Command.
~ssociate registrar for SIU's Residence Centers is Dr. John Schnabel.
VanHorn's family will stay in Parkville until at least January, when his son,
Albert, finishes Park Hill High School. His daughter Cora Louise is in Graden
School in Parkville. His wife is the former Kathryn Kannegieser of PhUadelphia.

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

�- 4 Dr. Eric R. Baber, Director, Alton , addressed the Rotary Club and the AAUW
on the same day this week in Alton.
He spoke to the Rotarians of the foresi ght and efforts of the civi c leaders
of the area in helping to establish centers of higher e~uc a tion in Al t on and East
St. Louis, and he cited these enrollment figures: SIU 1s up 30 per cent this Fall,
and -- according to available figures -- is the f a stest-growing university in the
country.
Educational experts had predicted an enrollment of 7,250 for SIU this year;
8,100 next year; and 9,000 by 1960. It is a lready past the.estimate for next year.
Enrollment now totals 8,3000 -- 6,500 in Carbondale, 1,200 1n Alton, and 600 in
East St. Louis. (Men outnumber \vomen 2 to 1.)
In size SIU ranks third in the state in full-ti me e nrollment ( a fter the University of Illinois and Northwestern), and even B.C. (before the centers) it was
the 76th largest institution of higher learning in the United States.
Professor Alonzo Myers of New York University, who predicted in an educational
survey of the area this Spring that there would be an enrollment , qf~ $.0Q.._the first
year if centers were established in Alton and East St. Louis, also predicted that
the number of freshmen each year would rise to about 2,000 in 1962 (if facilities
for accommodating this number could be made available), and to about 2,700 entering
freshmen in 1967. This would indicate an undergraduate enrollment of about 6,000
students in 1962 and about 9,000 in 1967.
Dr. Baber told the AAUW that the Alton Residence Center is offering a strong
liberal arts program for some 650 freshmen, and a basic framework of required
courses for sophomores, juniors, and seniors -- together with enough electives to
meet their requirements. He said that by ne x t Fall the center will be offering
most of the courses offered on the Carbondale campus at both the freshman and
sophomore levels, and an expanded offering at the junior and senior levels for
majors in English, math, history, government, s ociology, chemistry, physics,
biology, music, speech, economics, secretari a l science, business management,
education, physical education, and a few others.
How many students will the present campus accommodate ? Baber said that by
careful scheduling from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00p.m. the center can take care of 800-900
day students. Additional scheduling can accommodate 1,100-1,200 evening and Saturday students, making a total of 2,000 for next Fa ll. He also told both clubs
about the graduate program and the building of lib r ary and research resources.

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

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Vol.l, No.7

November 20, 1957

-

Compiled weekly by Information Service, Southwestern Illinois( Residence Office
Southern Illinois University, for the staff members of the Residence Centers, the
Newsletter is made possible by the cooperation of staff members who have contributed
news items.

F A C U L T Y N E WS L E T T E R
Alfred G. Harris, librarian, Alton, attended the annual meeting of the Illinois
Library Association in Chicago, November 7-9.
Incidentally, Harris recently set up an exhibit of pictures which alone is worth
the price of admission to the library. His Van Gogh reproductions, borrowed from the
art division of the Illinois State Library at Springfield, together with the newly
·framed "Girl in Blue Jeans" by Fay Pfafflin, make a fine exhibit.
He is also setting up a catalog for the Shurtleff Foundation books on religion
on a two-year loan basis --- for use in the Shurtleff Foundation religion classes.
The reserve book room is now outfitted with new tables and chairs and everything
is set to welcome the assistant librarian being sought by the administration.

S. D. Lovell, government and history, East St. Louis, will act as supervisor
of the evening college at East St. Louis the second quarter, Dr. Ring announced this
week. Beginning January 2, he will have an office at the East St. Louis High School
Building.

Carlyle C. Ring, director, East St. Louis, took part in an Area Drive-In Conference of Jr. high school teachers and admi nistrators from the southwestern Illinois
area on November 16. Dr. Ring served as consultant in one of the discussion groups
- ''Conflicts and Clashes between Teachers and Pupils".
The two-hour conference on pupil citizenship and pupil delinquency was held in
Edwardsville.

Joseph Bird, management, Alton and East St. Louis addressed the Married People
Club of the Upper Alton Baptist Church on November 9 . (Our spies are still trying
to learn the subject of his address. - ed.)

�, .

I

,...

- 2 -

Dr. Baber announced yesterday that there will be additional staff openings at the
Alton Residence Center for the \.Jinter Quarter in: 1_. Accounting and Economics, 2.
Secretarial Science, and 3' . ---cDVernment and Soc i ology.
He stated that he would welcome faculty information on candidates with the
following qualifications.
Accounting and Economics - Entering rank: Instructor for someone· with a Master's
Degree; Assistant Professor for someone holding a doctorate.
Secretarial Science-- Entering rank: Instructor, Master's Degree desired, but
demonstrated competence in teaching Typing and Shorthand could overcome lack of an
advanced degree.
(man or woman)
Government and Sociology- Entering rank: Instructor for someone with anM.A.;
Assistant Professor for someone holding a Ph.D.
(man or woman)
All three of these positions have been created because of increased enrollment .
Appointment is on the basis of a 9-month year. While summer teaching is not guaranteeQ,
every effort is made to provide it if desired. Summer employment is usually for two
'
months at the same rate as during the year.
Candidates invited to the Residence Center for an interview will be granted firstclass rail fare. Candidates should apply to Dr. Eric R. Baber, Director, Alton Residence Center, 2809 College, Alton, Illinois.

X

Dr. Carlyle Ring announced yesterday also that there will be additional staff
openings in the East St. Louis Residence Ceriter for the Winter Quarter in: 1. Speech ;
2. Elementary Education, and 3. Business Administration in the Day and Evening Progr~~s.
He stated that he would welcome faculty information on candidates \llith the
·
following qualifications.
Speech -- Entering rank: Instructor for someone· with a M.A.; Assistant Professor
for someone holding a Ph.D. M.A. required, doctorate preferred. Preference will be
given to someone who can handle some work in dramatics and/or radio-television. ~.Jhile
the major Hork will be speech in the East St. Louis Center, part of the work the first
year may be in the Alton Residence Center or in the field of English . (man or woman)
Elementary Education -- Entering Rank: Assistant Professor, doctorate required.
(man or woman) During the first year, education areas other than elementary may be
included.
Business Administration in the Day and Evening Programs -- Entering rank: Assistant Professor, doctorate preferred, but Master's with substantial experience in business
administration and management \llill be considered. (man)
All three of these positions have been created because of increased enrollment.
Appointment is on the basis of a 9-month year. l.Jhile summer teaching is not guaranteeq,
every effort is made to provide it if desired. Summer employment is usually for two :
months at the same rate as during the year.
Candidates invited to the Residence Center for an intervie\11 \'Jill be granted first..;
class rail fare. Candidates should apply to Dr.Carlyle C. Ring, Director, East St.
Louis Residence Center, 5903 State Street, East St. Louis, Illinois

Another FIRST
Last week Ne\11Sletter announced that the name SIU, Alton, had appeared for the
first time in a scholarly publication under the signature of a Southern staff member.
This \\leek the name SIU, East St. Louis, appeared under a poem by John Knoepfle, English,
East St. Louis, in Nimrod, published by t: he University of Tulsa. Title: ·" Good-bye~ My
City".

�- 3 -

Professor Horace B. Huddle, chemistry, East St. Louis, plans to spend Thanksgivtng
with his daughter, son-in-law, and two grand children in Mount Vernon, Illinois.
Last Sunday in the same town, Dr. Huddle saw his niece Barbara 1~alker, married to
Harold Frost of Olney. He says there were more title s among the guests than he'd evet
seen in one gathering outside of a professional meeting. The guests included a supr~me
court judge, a circuit judge, and a sprinkling of local judges. (The bride's father
is a judge. - ed.)

Betty Spahn, math, Alton, and the head of her household will supervise the
moving of their &gt;vordly goods from 5207 University Avenue in Chicago to their ne&gt;v
home, 3204 Main Street, Belleville, over the Thanksgiving vacation.

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                    <text>ftov~NBER 30,

WoL.II,

1958

No.3

CONPILED HONTHLY BY INFORNATION SERVICE, SOUTH WE STERN ILLINOIS
RESIDENCE OFFICE, SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, FOR THE STAFF
NENBERS OF THE RESIDENC E CENTER S, THE NEWSLETTER IS HADE POSSIBLE BY THE COOPERATION OF STAFF !1E l1BER S WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED
NEWS I TENS.

FACULTY

NEWS L E TT E R

Faculty lfumen's Club Sponsors All-~aculty Christmas Party
A Christmas Party for the entire faculty of the Residence Centers, planned by
the Women's Club, is scheduled for December 13. Married staff members are asked to
bring husbands or wives to the party, \vhich will include a dinner at the East St.
Louis Residence Center, Routes 40, 66, and Alternate 67 at Ohio Street.
Board members \vill bring the meat dish, and every other faculty member \vill be
asked by his telephone chairman to indicate his choice of other things to bring.
There will be a Christmas Grab Bag, so everyone is being asked to bring some white
elephant, appropriately wrapped and accompanied by an original verse. According to
the sponsors of the party, this really i0 supposed to be some Hhite elephant that
the donor has been \vaiting to unload at an affair like this.
(NEHSLETTER \vas advised to carry this item as the lead article in this issue "because busy housewives
haven't time .to plow through ponderous accounts of abstruse articles published in
scholarly maga~ines and lengthy papers read before professional organizations.")

Add to December Calendar:
Square Dancing -- Alton Residence Center Gym, December 6, 7:00 p.m.

New University Telephone Lines in Operation
Two direct telephone tie lines are nmv in operation bet\·J een the Alton and East
St. Louis Residence Centers. (The administrative offices at the Broadview Hotel are
serviced by the sHitchboard of the East St. Louis Center.) ONLY AUTHORIZED FACULTY
and STAFF HEHBERS NAY USE THESE DIRECT LINES, according to the executive dean's office.
Since these lines are in demand almost continuously, staff members are urged to complete calls on them with celerity.
The Business Office today asked FACULTY NEHSLETTER to publish these instructions
to staff members concerning use of University telephones: "If you wish to make a call
from one Center to the other, ask your suitchboard operator to connect you with the
operator at the other Center. \.vhen she ans~;vers, tell her what extension you want.
"If you \vish to make an outside call, tell the switchboard operator at your Center what number you wish. She will give you an outside line, and -- on request -she will tell you whether you can dial your number directly or \vhether you must dial
"O" to place your call with the Telephone Company operator.
(Some outside calls can
be made more economically through the S\·Ji tchboard of the other Center.)
11
IF YOU HISH to MAKE a LONG DISTANCE CALL~ GIVE YOUR Sh!ITCHBOARD OPERATOR YOUR
NAME and DEPk'lTMENT AS l.ffiLL AS the Nut-lBER YOU INTEND td CALL. She has been instructed
to keep a list of all long-distance calls. (If you call Carbondale 1340, tell her the
Extension as well.)
"If you call from a telephone outside the Centers, dial EJTHER Bridge 4-2100 or
Alton 2-0001, and the s&gt;vitchboard operator who answers will help you get the Residence
Center extension you wish."
----------------------------~------

�. &gt;·

- 2 -

New Directory Now on Sale
Just off the press is a 1958-59 directory containing the names of the faculty
and staff at everycampus of SIU. One of these will be supplied by Auxiliary Enterprises for each extension. Additional directories may be purchased at the University Book Store at 75 cents each.
In this new directory the faculty and staff of the Residence Centers are listed
on pp.41-47, and every Alton extension is a three-digit number.

----------------------------------SIU Playing Cards Now Available
Attractive twin-pack SIU playing cards are now available at $2.50. Featuring
Brown &amp; Bigelo~v's patented Redi Slip plastici zed finish, they can be wiped clean
with a damp cloth. An extra joker, for canasta, is included in each deck. They are
packed in a ttvin-tuck gold carton and mailing case and make ideal gifts. The University Seal is on the back. The project is sponsored by the SIU Alumni Association.
Place your orders vlith Mildred Arnold, Suite 227, Broadvie~v Hotel, East St. Louis,
Illinois; .Telephone
- Bridge 4-2100, extension 3 or 4. (advertisement)
'

Going on THE ACADEMIC MARKETPLACE
Early this month NEWSLETTER asked Dr. \Villiam T. Going, dean of instruction,
to write down for this issue some of his impressions of the University Library's
latest book on the hiring and firing of university faculty members. Several days
later he tvrote:
"All of us interested in the anatomy of our academic profession -- its
mores, morales, and machinations -- will find Theodore Daplow and
Reece J. HcGee's The Academic Harketplace (Basic Books, Inc., 1958) a
book worth reading. (The copy I read was furnished through the courtesy of East St. Louis Residence Center Library.)
"This is scarcely the place for a full-fledged book review, but I
thought you would be interested in at least three points.
;'Quoting from an address by H. H. Cowley, the authors remind us that
after the emergence of the Italian universities in the late Middle
Ages, students held all the administrative posts, establishing fees
to be paid professors, the length of their l~ctures, and the fines
to be levied against teachers who came to their lecture halls late
or who taught less well than the students thought desirable. Eventually, for a complex of reasons, student control &gt;vaned, and the
civil authorities took over by appointing what we would today call
boards of trustees . . . lay bodies of non-academic people. Our
American universities, copying in particular the organization of
Yale and Princeton, who, in turn, copied the University of Edinburgh
and Leyden, have thus inherited an Italian pattern of giving all the
ultimate governing power to boards of trustees, professors being in
fact hired men.

�- ., .)

Going on Ttffi ACADEMIC MARKETPLACE (Cont'd)
"A second matter of interest is a sampling of the eleven recommendations
in the final chapter:
1. That the tenure rank of lecturer be established for .men primarily interested in teaching.
2. That the order of seniority at each academic level be respected
and streng"thened.
3. That standard base salaries be adopted for all academic ranks,
and that salary information be made a matter of public and
accessible record.
4. That a standard teaching load, expressed in class hours, be
adopted in all departments of the university for all members
of the teaching staff.
5. That both the period of probationary appointments and the period
of probation be much extended.
6. That fringe benefits be improved and expanded.
7. That the personal and arbitrary control of administrative officers
over members of the faculty be reduced as far as possible.
8. That regular, orderly procedures be established for promotion
and for the renewal of contracts.
"The third point, which is an ironic one, I borrowed from the summary
on the book jacket. Like most anatomies, The Academic Narketplace does
not present a pretty picture. lle learn, for example, that the chief
criteria used in making appointments are prestige and compatibility,
but that prestige, which rests on scholarly achievement and not on
teaching ability, is judged by a survey of opinion rather than a survey of published work: the printed material gathered or submitted
for that judgment is looked at but not read.
"Jacques Barzun, who has \·l ritten the foreward to the book, concludes:
'To a foundation, this work is obviously a report; to the authors'
colleagues, it will be knmvn as a study; but to the reader, the lucky
reader, it will surely seem what it is-- a book.'"
Last \veek Going called attention to ::t review of this book in the December issue
of HARPER'S HAGAZINE, in which Paul Pickrel, discussing THE ACADENIC MARKETPLACE and
THE ACADEHIC lUND by Paul Lazarsfeld and \lagner Thielens, Jr., says : "After these
two studies of the problems of the academic bureaucracy it is a comfort to turn to a
book concerned with the quality of education offered in American colleges -- SOME
OF MY BEST FRIENDS ARE PROFESSORS, by George \.Jilliams.

Dr. Hheat Addresses 11th Group since Start of Quarter
This \veek brought to eleven the number of community groups Dr. Leonard \.Jheat
has been asked to address this quarter. In addition to giving four talks on the
State Bond Issue for Education-Helfare purposes and appearing before four church
groups, he addressed the teachers and administrators of the Belleville Elementary
Schools; the Belleville League of Homen Voters and the PTA Council; and the St.
Clair County School Administrator's Association.
Hheat, supervisor of graduate advisement at both Residence Ce nters, came to
SIU last January from the University of llinnesota at Duluth.

�SIU to Ask Le r; islature for Honey to Develop Proposed Second Campus
Southern Illinois University will ask the st ate le gi s l a tur e to appropriate
$20 million in capital funds durin g the ne xt bi ennium for a proposed second campus
near Edwardsville, it was announced last ue ek a t a meeting of the University's Board
of Trustees in Carbondale.
Construction, land development , and planning cost es timates for the ne•v campus
during 1959·61 total approximately 1/3 of the total $62 million the university \vill
re quest from the next session of the general assembly for capital improvements.
The board of trustees also approved an operating budget re c. uest of $47,807,889.00
·· more than double the appropriations received for the current biennium -- but costs
of operating the Edwardsville campus or the present SIU residence centers in Alton,
East St. Louis, and Belleville 1vere not li ste d separately .
Hmvever, the capital budget the univer s ity will seek ear-marks $14 million for
buildings on the proposed campus to se rve the populous in the Hadison and St. Clair
Counties area. Another $4 million 1·1 ill be made for land development and $2 million
for architectural and engineering planning , the board decided. A $1,600,000 fund
drive headed by civic leaders is now underway for purchase of the 2 ,600-acre site
west of Edward sville.
The initial buildings planned and thei r estimated cost are: central services and
classroom building, $3.5 million; classroom and office building, $2 .5 million; physical
education, $1.5 million; library, $3 mill ion; natural sciences, $2 million; and physical plant and pmver plant, $1.5 million. Some $20 million &gt;·Jill be neede d for neH buildings at Carbondale, the bo ard stated.
Commenting on the ne ed for hi gher appro priations for the unive rsity, President
D. \v. Morris pointed out that SIU' s enrollment has increased by 7, 267 students since
the post-Har peal~, a gain of some 2, 000 mo r e th an al l five of the other state colleges
and universities combined. lvhile most schools across the country are just now approaching their record totals of 1948 and 1949, Southern's student body h a s increased by 329
per cent, reflecting the greatly increased area int eres ts in hi gher education and the
resulting nevl opportunities and pro c rams at SIU.
Morris also said tha t service-minded SIU tau ght 9,000 students in more than Lf00
extension and adult education classes of f the campus last year, not including students
registered for credit courses a t the universi ty's residence cent e r s. Another 35,000
attended non-credit workshops and conf erences at the university.
(In a November 20 editorial, the CIIICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE tried to make out that
"the competition for the tax dollar in Il l inois \v as amic able " until SIU' s "ambitions
. . .led to such fantastic demands as a neu 2 , 600- acre c ampus in Had ison-St. Clair
Counties and a 194 million dollar capital improvement pro gram. ': )

Dr. Broadbooks Publishes on Mamma l s
The JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY for Hay of this year carried an o.rticle by Dr. Harold
Broadbooks, zoolo gy, Alton, on the Nort huo.r d Extension o f the Kanc;aroo Rat in Washington.
In July an illustrated 48-page a rti c le by Bro adbooks on the Life History and Ecology
of the Chipmunk in Eastern Michigan ap pe are d in MISC. PUBL., NUSEUl-1 OF ZOOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF HICIIIGAN, NO.l03.

Dr. Duncan " Defe nds Biased Teachin ~"
"In Defense of Biased Teaching:' before the Carbondale Unitarian fellowship last
week, Dr. Robert Duncan, evening colle ge s upervisor , Alton, call e d attention to the
loss of human v a lues in our growing technical proficiency.

�•

- 5 -

Dean See Advocates Better Training for U.S. Foreign Service Officials
State Department officials should be Given more thorou gh training in the
languages , history, and customs of the foreign countrie s to \vhich they are assigned,
Dr. Harold B. See told a joint meeting of the Rotarian s and teachers of Collinsville
last week.
See, uho spent a year in Burma as a Fulbright lecturer and consultant to the
Ministry of Education immediately before coming to SIU to head the University's program in SouthHestern Illinois, proposed severa l steps that should be taken to improve
the U.S. Forei gn Service:
1. A greater attempt should be made toHard elimination of the language
barrier by giving more an d better training in l angu age facilities to
state department officials.
2. Increased understanding of foreicn peoples could be achieved through
better and more extensive training of state department officials in
the history and customs of the people and through direct contact Hith
the foreign nationals \vhi le on . ass ignment.
3. Career diplomats and state department officials should be trained for
Hark in a selected area. Tvm- year ass ignments to a foreign country are
not efficient, since it takes a neHcomer almost that long to become well
enough acquainted with the people to be of any value as an emissary.
4. Channels should be provided through which undistorted facts may reach
policy-making bodies in llas hin[;ton.
In addition to appearing as the featured speaker before the Collinsville group
and tHo Belleville groups, the Ea s t Side Han agement Association and the Methodist Nen' s
Association, See spoke informally before more than a do ze n other community groups in
November; subject: SIU's Development in This Area.

American Institute of Musicolo gy Brings Out Dr. Harren's Publications
Four publications by Dr. Ed&gt;vin Harren, music, Alton, dealing \Jith the Hasses
of Robert Fayrt'ax, are being brought out by the American Institute of Musicology in
Rome:
"The Hasses of Robert Fayrfax; ' Hill appear in the Institute series, CORPUS
HENSURAJ3LIS HUSICL\E. The volume \vill contain the six Hasses of Fayrfax, published
here for the first time . "The Life and 17orks of Robert Fayrfax'' appeared in a Spring
issue of the Institute's organ, ~1USICA DISCIPLINA. A detailed stylistic analysis of
the Masses Has accepted for publication by the next issue o f the same organ. The tHo
HUSICA DISCIPLINA articles Hill be combined and amplified \Jith several facsimilies in
book form in the Institute's series, }lliSICOLOGICAL STUDIES AND DOCUMENTS, also scheduled
for publication this year.
The Director of the Institute, Dr. Armen Carapetyan, has asked \.Varren to collaborate
with Dennis Stevens, eminent British musicologist, in bringing out the rest of Fayrfax's
works.

Staff llembcrs Attend Professional Hee tin gs
Attendance at professional meetint;s reported to NEHSLETTER since the last i ss ue:
South Central J:.iodern Language Association, Tulsa, November 7 and G
Dr. Robert Duncan, chairman, languaGe and fine arts division
Southern Illinois English Teacher s Association, Carbondale, October 31
Dr. Robert Duncan, En g lish, Alton
Dr. Milton Byrd, English, East St. Louis

�- GStaff Hembers Attend Professional Ueetings (Cont'd)
American Associntion of Evening ColleGes, Louisville, November 17-19
Dr. Robert Duncan, evening colle Ge supervisor, Alton
Mr. Clifton Cornwell, evening colle ge supervisor, East St. Louis
Adult Education Council of Greater St. Louis, St. Louis, October 15
Dr. Robert Duncan, evening college supervisor, Alton
Dr. James Turner, director, East St. Louis Center
American Association of Teachers of Germnn, Chicago, November 15
Dr. Ruth Kilchenmann, German and French, Alton
Dr. Raymond J. Spahn, German, East St. Louis

From the Desk of the Dean of Instruction
"As He appronch the end of the first quarter of our second academic year, I
hope you agree that we have made reasonnble progress \vi th thing s academic. Nuch,
I know, is yet to be done. Nmv that the Faculty Council has had some experience
in acting as an advisory clearinghouse of instructional matters for the Residence
Centers' administration, I hope thnt you will feel free to refer to it those matters
which go beyond the faculty meetings of the local centers.
"As &gt;·Je approach the first grading period of the academic year, I trust that you
· believe Hith me that the way a faculty member chooses to grade his students is im
important part of academic freedom. I hope that you \vill evaluate your students against
the goals and aims that you hnve established for the course, measuring them against the
decent competency of the field as you have come to know it across the years as student
and teacher.
"And after this task is over, I hope that all of us can enjoy a pleasant holiday
with family and friends."

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                    <text>SouthlNestern Illinois Residence Centers
Southern Illinois University

FACULTV

•.

NEWS

BULLETIN

�NO VE11BER _,

Vo L .. III_, No •.2

1959

F ACU LTY

N E !J S

Southern Illinois University's
SOUTHWESTERN ILLINOIS CAMPUS

MOVING TO EDWARDSVILLE
Moving day for the Vice President and the
Dean of SIU's Southwestern Illinois Campus
is November 30. At that time Vice President Harold W. See and Dean William T. Going
will move from their offices in the Broadview Hotel into the former Gerling home on
the Edwardsville campus site.
In addition to See and Going, those who
will have offices in the Gerling house include: H. Bruce Brubaker, assistant to the
vice president for institutional research;
Emery Casstevens, supervisor of the industrial and technical program; Raymond J.
Spahn, assistant to the vice president for
publications and information service; Mildred Arnold, editorial writer; Wilma Jean
Boron and Beatrice Holmes, clerk-steno gr aphers; and Julia Maupin and Isla Steele,
secretaries.
The central offices ' of the registrar and
director of admissions, and his staff occupy the former O'Brien homes on plats 24 an d
25. Assistant Registrar Robert Martin also
has his offices in Edwardsville.

B U L L E T I N
Mildred Arnold, Editor
Room 234, Broadview Hotel
Bridge 4-2100, Ext. 5
The switchboard operator at Edwardsville is
Hilda Schlemer. Edward E. Williams is custodian .
A map and legend of the Edwardsville site
appear on the next page. The abandoned
right of way cuttin g through the heart of
the 2600-acre tract was purchased last month
from the Illinois Terminal Railroad.

TO GIVE RECITAL
KENWYN BOLDT, instructor of piano, will give
a recital Friday, December 4, at 8:00p.m.

in the auditorium on the Alton campus. His
program will include compositions by Haydn,
Mendelssohn, Schumann, Prokofieff and Chopin.
Boldt played for the Alton Council of the
Federated Women's Club October 9 at the
Alton YWCA. On November 6 he and his wife,
Frina, presented a pro gram for one piano-four hands--for the ARC student chapter of
the Music Educator's National Conference.
ATTEND MEETINGS AND CONFERENCES

Schnabel's Edwardsville staff includes
Harilyn Armstrong, clerk-typist; Margaret
Higginbotham, assistant recorder; Maude
Lamb, clerk-stenographer; and Mina Popp e,
secretary.

MARY MARGARET BRADY, associate professor of
secretarial science and business education,
and STEPHANIE B. CONWELL, associate professor of nursing, attended the South Central
Region Soroptimist convention at St. Joseph,
Ho., October 24-25.

Coordinator of libraries is Frederick A.
Forrest, also assistant professor of hist ory
and associate librarian. With him at the
former Hardbeck house (plat 64) are TiehCheng Chin, lecturer and cataloguer-bibli og rapher; George Farnum, instructor and cataloguer-bibliographer; and Eugene Herscher,
instructor.

KENNETH F. ESTEY and Mrs. Estey attended the
annual session of the Illinois Baptist State
Convention held in the University Baptist
Church in Champai gn on October 25-26. Estey
is lecturer in reli gious education. He attended the Southern Area Fall Convocation
of the Illinois Bapti s t Student Movement at
Carbondale October 23 - 24.

Others on hi s Edw a rd sville sta ff a r e Dorothy JAMES L. DIEKROEGER attended the annual
Braunsdorf, clerk-stenographer; Una Cornwe ll, Southwestern Coaches Conference in East St.
Robert Tweedy and Kathryn West, clerk-typists. Louis on October 29. Diekroeger is instruc-

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St. Louis Road

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Illinoi s Terminal R. R.
Right of l~ay

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Land Purcha sed
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64

�- 3 -

tor in physical education for men.
EDWIN B. WARREN, assistant professor of
music, has been elected to membership in
the Plainsong and Medieval Music Society of
Great Britian, one of England's most important learned societies. Warren's second
article dealing with the life and works of
Robert Fayrfax, early English Renaissance
composer, appeared in the last issue of
Musica Disciplina, polylingual Yearbook of
Music History published in Holland. The
article is a 30-page stylistic study of the
masses, which will be off the press before
the end of the year. It will be the first
volume of the collected works of Fayrfax
which Warren is transcribing and editin g
for the American Institute of Musicology.
The 1960 issue of Musica Disciplina '"ill
carry an article on Fayrfax's motets and
settings of the Magnificat.
Warren was one of the speakers on the National Secretaries Association Workshop
held in Alton last month. His talk, entitled "look and Listen," dealt with the interrelations of the arts and how to get
maximum enjoyment from them. In addition
to all his other activities, Warren con~
tinues _to write the program notes for the
Alton Civic Orchestra concerts.
RECEIVES COPYRIGHT
NORMAN SHOWERS, men's physical education
instructor at Alton, received a copyright
in September for his "Basic Mathematics
for Physical Education Students."
Showers gave a lecture-demonstration on
bowling October 30 at Lewis and Clark Junior High . School, Wood River. He explained
how to bowl and how to organize bowling
leagues. Showers recently attended a bowling instructors' school in Granite City con. ducted by Joe Wilman, one of the "Hall of
Fame" bowlers.
CO-AUTHOR OF PUBLICATION GUIDE
"Publication Guide for Literary and Linguistic Scholars," title of the book coauthored by MILTON B. BYRD, assistant professor of English, received a very favorable
review in the current issue of PMLA, offi-

cial publication of the Modern Language Association. The book is a reference text for
academic authors on literary subjects. "We
commend it as a useful tool for every scholar, young or old, who is about to submit an
article for publication," PMLA said in its
review. The other joint author is Arnold
Goldsmith of Wayne State University.

DUNCAN COMMENDED FOR ARTICLE IN AIR FACTS
The following letter from Hilmer C. Nelson,
colonel in the United States Air Force, was
received by the editor of Air Facts magazine: "I recently read a reprint of an
Air Facts article, "Grow Old With Me," in
the August issue of the Navy flying safety
magazine, Approach.
"I have read numerous similar articles during my many years of flying, but none impressed me so deeply or had such a personal
impact. "Grow Old With Me" is, in my opinion, the finest expression of flight safety
philosophy yet published.
"I have taken the liberty of reproducing
the article for distribution to all pilots
of my command. Although this is a post
facto request for permission to reproduce
your article, I hope this action meets with
your approval.
"May I congratulate you and your staff on
the timeliness of your magazine and your
contributions to aviation."
This letter was forwarded to Robert W.
Duncan by the editor of Air Facts, the magazine for which Duncan writes. The original
appeared anonymously in Air Facts.

BUSINESS EDUCATION TEACHERS MEET AT ALTON
Business education teachers met on the Alton
campus October 31 for an area conference.
Dr. Alan C. Lloyd of the executive staff of
the Gregg Publishing Division of McGrawHill Book Company spoke.
Lloyd is considered "an outstanding
authority in the field of teaching typewriting." His lectures and demonstrations on methods to develop skill in type-

�- 4 writing and various techniques to use in
classroom procedures were excellent, acc ording to MARY MARGARET BRADY, associate professor of secretarial science and business
education. Miss ·Brady and a committee of
Alton high school teachers arranged the conference. The one hundred teachers attending ,
Miss Brady said, came from Ashland, Blooming ton, Pittsfield, Chester, Shelbyville , Pe kin,
Herrin and Mari ~ n. Members of the busine ss
education depar ~ments at Normal, Easte rn and
the Carbondale campus of SIU attended, as
did a number of teachers from the St. Loui s
public schools.

IBM TYPEWRITING CLINIC HELD IN ALTON

An IBM Typewriting Clinic was held in Alton
on October 30 for SIU and high school s ec retarial science students. Miss Di xi e
Davidson, educational represent a-tive for
IBM, conducted the clinic, assisted by one
of the IBM sales representatives, Herbert
Giessing. MARY MARGARET BRADY arr anged the
clinic. Roughly 150 high school and unive rsity students attended, as well as a numb e r
of secretaries from the campus.

month by PETER SIMPSON. He read from his
0\m works and those o f contemporary and well
known mode rn poets . Musical background wa s
furnished by the Jimmy Williams quartet .
Simpson, an English instructor at the Ea st
St. Louis center, and his wife have a new
daughter, Mary Caroline, born October 4.
KNOEPFLE JUDGES SHORT STORY CONTEST
JOHN KNOEPFLE, lecturer in English at the
East St. Louis center, recently served as
one of the judges of a short story contest
for Scott Air Base writers. Other judges
were from Belleville Junior College and
~vashin g ton Universit y .

An abstra ct of the paper Knoep f le read last
March before the Central Renaissance Conf ere nce "will be printed in the September
issue of The Shakespeare Newsletter, whenever The Shakes pear e Newsletter gets around
to printing its Sept ember issue , " the author says. Title of the paper is "Macbeth
and Seven Steps to Despair."
QUOTING DUPO COLUMNIST

HEART ASSOCIATION COMMITTEE MEETS
The education committee of the St. Clair
Heart Association--an integral part of the
Illinois Heart Association--met October 26
at the East St. Louis center. VIRGIL SEYMOUR, instructor of sociolo gy and supe rvi so r
of the ' Evening College and Adult Educ ation,
East St. Louis , i s a membe r of the commi t t ee .
JUDGES PLAY CONTEST
MARY BELLE SMITH, speech instructor , served
as a judge for the Catholic Youth Confe r ence
play contest held at Marquette High Scho o l
November 1. Five deanery CYC group s pr e sented plays, Miss Smith said, Springfield ,
Alton, Quincy, Effingham and Vecatur.

GIVES POETRY CONCERTS
A series o f four jaz z poetry concerts was
given at Cry stal Palace, St. Louis, l ast

Quoting from Lynn Ashton's column, "News,
Views and Comments about Dupo Area , " a
feature in the Dupo Herald Tribune: "TEACHERS' MEETING . . . something MUST be done
to make time spent by teachers at teachers'
meetings more profitable. True, this year
the Thursday we spent at O'Fallon was ALMOST a day well spent . . . DR. ROBERT
STEINKELLNER was just about the most dynamic speaker heard at a teachers' meeting
in many o 'cotton-pickin' moon.' He thinks
(and so do a lot of other teachers) that
the language arts . . . which include talking, listening, reading and writing . . .
are not getting nearly enough stress in our
schools today. We a re failing to give our
youth a completely well-rounded skill in
the handling of the a rts."

TUCKER TO HELP WITH NEA PROJECT
MARK TUCKER, professor of special education,
has been invited to participate in the development of a publication for the National

�- 5 Education Association's Project on the
Academically Talented. The publication
will deal with guidance of the gifted student, Tucker said, and the meetings will
be held in Washington, D. C., from November 19 to 21.

PARTICIPATES IN PHILOSOPHICAL CONFERENCE
The fourteenth Annual Conference of The
Mountain-Plains Philosophical Association
was held October 15-17 at Colorado College
in Colorado Springs. The theme emphasized
the hundredth anniversary of the Origin
of The Species and the birth of John Dewey.
GERALD RUNKLE, associate professor of philosophy, read a paper on "Human norms and
biolog;cal theory."

INTE~\VIEWED

ON WOKZ

On her November 4 morning interview program
on WOKZ, Helen Walters had as her guest
ROBERT DUNCAN, associate professor of English and supervisor of the Evening College
and Adult Education at the Alton center.
Duncan answered questions on course offerings and degree requirements at SIU.
FACULTY WOMEN'S CLUB

by contacting Mrs. C. E. PEEBLES, 3015
Leverett, Alton (HOward 2-3425).

AWARDS PRIZES AT ART EXHIBITION
On October 26 CATHERINE MILOVICH, art
instructor at the East St. louis center,
awarded the prizes in the Cole County
(Missouri) art exhibition sponsored by the
Jefferson City Art Club. There were three
classifications, professional, amateur and
student. Mrs. Milovich found entries from
the state penitentiary of particular interest. Three of them received prizes.
JUDGE HALLOWEEN FLOATS
EVELYN BUDDEMEYER AND JOHN RICHARDSON of
the art staff at Alton and Mrs. MILOVICH
judged floats in the annual Halloween parade held in Alton on October 31. They
were assisted by art teachers from Principia
and Monticello colleges.

FACULTY MEMBERS FILL SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS
EVELYN BUDDEMEYER spoke to the Federated
Women's Club of Edwardsville on October 1.
Her topic, "Man's At tempts to Meet His
Aesthetic Needs."

The Faculty Women's Club of SIU's Southwestern Illinois Campus will hold its November meeting on Thursday afternoon, November 19, at the Edwardsville Public Library. It will convene at one o'clock.
Vice President Harold W. See will be the
speaker. Members of the telephone committee
will arrange for those who need transportation. Mrs. D. E. BEAR is chairman of the
meeting. Dues ($2.00) are payable at this
time.

"Etiology of Delinquency" was the title
of a talk given October 6 by JAMES TURNER,
director of the East St. louis cente) at
the Hillcrest Christian Church.

An all-faculty Christmas dinner, sponsored
by the Faculty Women's Club of SWIG, Hill
be held at 7:00p.m., Saturday, December 12,
at the Hotel Stratford in Alton. Cost of
each dinner, including tax and tips, is
$3.10. Reservations and money must be sent
to Mrs. JAMES TURNER, 202 South Summit Drive,
Collinsville, before December 9. Cance llations may be made on or before December 10

Speaking to the Parent-Teachers Association
at Hartford on October 12, DAVID BEAR, assistant professor of education, Alton, discussed "Education in a Changing Society."
He returned to the same school November 9
to talk to the Mother's Club on the "Function
of the Home in the Pre-School Development
of the Child."

KURT GLASER, lecturer in government at
Alton, addressed the International Relations
Study Group of the American Association of
University Women at Alton on November 3.
His subject was "German Refugees and German
Reunification."

�- 6 -

PRESENT SIU PROGRAM
JOHN J. GLYNN, JOHN SCHNABEL and ROBERT
aroused considerable interest in
the SIU program October 27 when they presented it at the senior and parents' night
at Hazelwood High School, in Missouri.
(Copied from November 2 issue of the Alton
Bulletin Board.)

MARTI~

PARTICIPATES IN SYMPOSIUN
WINSLOW SHEA, philosophy instructor at
Alton, attended the annual meeting of the
American Society of Aesthetics held in
Cincinnati October 29-31 and participated
in a symposium on "The Role of Iconology
in Critical Understanding and Judgment."
Last month he gave a lecture at a special
honors seminar at Nonticello College on
"The Bible and the Paradoxes of our JudeaChristian Heritage." He participated
in a panel discussion with JOHN RICHARDSON
on "Modern Automobile Design" November 1,
over station WOKZ. This discussion inaugurated a series of programs on WOKZ called
SIU ON THE AIR.
BI-STATE PILOT CONNITTEE NEETS
A committee of civic ieaders from St. louis
and Nadison and St. Clair counties in Illinois will meet at Pere Narquette Park,
Friday (11-13-59) to study development of
the bi-state area.

,
,

Acting as hosts will be the chief executives
of the three major universities serving the
area, Delyte W. Morris, president of Southern Illinois University; Paul Reinert, S.J.,
president of St. Louis University; and Ethan
A. H. Shepley, ch -:ncc llor of h'ashington
University.
W. Victor Weir of Creve Couer and C. E.
Townsend, editor of the Granite City Press
Record, will serve as temporary chairmen
of the 16-member pilot committee, which
will propose ways and means to achieve
increased voluntary coordination among
agencies concerned with improvement programs in the bi-state area.

Ia~ NcHarg, landscape ~rchitecture department chairman at the University of Pennsylvania and consultant to the planning
commissions of Philadelphia and london, will
meet with the committee.
Illinois members of the committee are Lloyd
NcBride of Granite City, sub-district director , United Steelworkers of l\IT!erica
District 34; Curt E. Eckert, partner,
Eckert Orchard Association, Belleville;
Robert Gauen, vice-president, Gauen Lumber
Co., Collinsville; William A. Hitchcock,
vice-president, State Savings and loan
Association, E~st St. Louis; Richard
Judson, supervisor, Training and Community
Relations, Standard Oil Co., Wood River;
Robert Naucker, plant manager, Alton Box
Board Co., Alton; Charles Schmidt, executive partner, Oscar Schmidt Agency, Edwardsville, and Townsend.
Nissouri members of the committee, all
officials of St. louis concerns, are
Joseph P. Clark, president, St. Louis Labor
Ccuncil; John F. Hallett, vice-president,
First National Bank in St. louis; Robert
E. Hillard, executive vice-president,
Fleishman-Hillard, Inc.; Fred B. Hunt, assistant vice-president in charge of operations, Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.;
Eugene J. Nackey, Murphy and Nackey; Mrs.
John h'. Seddon, chairman, Committee on City
Redevelopment, League of Homen Voters; C.
Spencer Tocus, principal, Hadley Technical
High Schoo 1; and Weir, president of the St.
louis County Water Co.

\

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                    <text>�November-December 1960

N E 'W S

BULLETIN

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
Southwestern Illinois Campus

Mildred Arnold , Editor
Fangenroth Road
Edwardsville , I llinois

POLITICAL ANALYST VISITS SWIC
Political analyst Samuel Lubell visited
SIU's Southwestern Campus November 14,
at which time he discussed the presidential election results of November 8 . He
appeared at the Student Union in Alton
during ' the afternoon and that evening
addressed faculty, students and area cit, izens.
The Catholic vote, _h e said, probably helped Kennedy get a majority of the electoral
votes, although it may have cut down his
popular vote. This interpretation was
possible, he explained, because of the predominance of Catholics in the large cities
of the states which threw the electoral
vote to Kennedy . Lubell expressed the
opinion that church pressure was exerted
on both sides. In recounting interviews
with persons who had been advised by their
church leaders to vote for a particular
candidate, he included sev~ral with citizens in the Bible Belt at Arkansas who
had never voted before'for a presidential
candidate. He told also o f an interview
with a Wood River woman who had not voted
for either candidate because her husband
had voted for one c.andidate and her ,ehurch
had advised her to vote for the . other.
Lubell estimated that 50 to 60 per cent
of the Catholic Republican vote went to
Kennedy, with the reservation that statistics on this, of course, would be hard
to come by; he indicated that very likely
the votes of those casting their ballots
strictly on the religious issue tended to
cancel each other out " He called attention to the fact that Kennedy had won

54 per cent of the vote in Madison County
as compar ed withAl Spli~h:.w_9.o got 40 per
cent in 1928.
INTERCOLLEGIATE BASKETBALL
Southwestern Illinois Campus students have
their first combined intercollegiate ba sketball team this season. For the past two
seasons the Alton center has had a varsity
basketball team , coached by HOWARD NESBITT,
and the East St. Louis center has par ticipated in a junior varsity schedule. Combin$:ng
players fr om the two centers makes a better
schedule, according to Nesbitt.
The sea s on will be highlighted by particip,a tion in th~ Concordia-Harris College Invitational Tournament in St. Louis and a trip
to Des Moines, I owa, for a game with Drake
University . Other teams on the schedule
are Concordia Seminary of St. Louis, Rolla
School of Mines , Rockford College , Chicago
Teachers College, MacMurray College , and
Harris Teachers College. Nesbitt is being
assisted this year by RI CHARD SPEARS , for mer assistant basketball coach at Fresno
State College (Calif.).
FROM THE DESK OF THE DEAN
I continue to hope that the faculty finds
extracts from the issues on the Intercollegiate Press Bulletin informative , especially
where the summaries represent the opinions
of faculty committees and administrators
dealing with problems that immediately con-

�- 2 -

cern us:
Prospective element_a ry teachers at Pactfic
Union College may now major in a content
field, and still complete state teaching
credentials.
The professional sequence includes 12
quarter hours of foundation courses, including child growth, educational psychology, and principles of education.In addition, it will contain 15 hours of elementary methods a·n d 12 hours of student teaching . Dean Normington says that this program will be of special interest to students who wish to prepare for elementary
teaching while taking a major in another
field .
• • • An exhaustive study of the possibil-

ity of a longer school year for State College and University of Wisconsin students
has been .undertaken by the State Coordinating Committee for Higher Education.
The committee studied particularly the
"trimester" plan, which would divide the
academic calendar into three maj -o r periods:
September to mid-December, January to midApril, and mid-April through July. The
arrangement would provide one month of
general vacation in August and shorter
holidays at Thanksgiving, Christmas, and
Easter.
•• • Bridgeport, Conn. -(I.P . )-No student
is justified in blaming his cheating on
the fact .that "everyone does it," says
Dr. Alfred R. Wolff, director of Student
Personnel at the University of Bridgeport.
In the past, he admits, copies of tests
were procured by students by such means
as taking imperfect copies out of wastebaskets .
This is no longer possible, claims Dr.
Wolff, because the instructor is now required to watch the entire procedure of
typing and mimeographing an exam. In
addition, the procedure in the mail and
supply room, where it once was rumored

that copies of exams were being obtained,
is now being watched, warns Dr. Wolff .
During an interview in 1958 with five University students who admitted cheating, one
of them related that his reasons were that
he resented obscure objective questions,
and saw cheating as a means of balancing
this handicap. Dr. Wolff remarks that students tend t .o blame everyone but themselves
in such a case. He believes it is not the
instructors' fault, although it is best
for the student to be given as few chances
as possible to cheat.
" ·'

.

....

-..

'

...

~ .

Plagiarism, too, if it can be proven deliberate, should be rated in the same manner
as cheating, Wolff maintains .
The penalties for cheating on this campus
are: first offense results in a zero and
a lowering of the grade by one letter;
second offense gets an automatic failure
in the course; and third offense means expulsion from the class. Dr. -Wolff feels
that, although light, these penalties could
not be made heavier because the instructors
might then be reluctant t-o turn a student in .
Boulder, Colo.-(I.P.)-The faculty of
the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Colorado has tightened suspension
levels, effective this fall. The faculty
voted a temporary change to last from September 1960 to September 1962. During this
period a student will be subject to susp.e nsion if his average is:
(1) Below 1.4 after two semesters completed
or 24-47 hours attempted;
(2) Below 1. 6 after four semesters of 48-71
hours;
(3) Below 1. 8 after six semesters or 72-93
hours;
(4) Below 2.0 after 94 or more hours attempted ,
According to Acting Assistant Dean Glenn
Terrell, the more severe suspension levels
will go into effect in September 1962, when
a student will be subject to suspension if
his average is below 1. 5 after two semesters

�- 3 -

or below 2. 0 a .f ter four or more semesters.
The present rule putting any student on
probation whose average falls below 2.0
will remain unchanged. Dean Terrell said
the new plan would be administered with
flexibility, with students allowed to
petition for a waiver of suspension. lie
a'lso noted that "many students have been
on probation for numerous consecutive
semesters, are not eligible for upper
division work and are otherwise failing
to make satisfactory progress toward the
degree.
"Two couunittees (the advising and academic
progress couunittees) are particularly con·cerned with the numbers of students on
scholastic probation and with the meaninglessnes~ oi the con~ept of scholastic
probation."
· • • • Springfield, Mo. -(I..P.)-A new pattern for education in business is emerging
this year at a s~ll liberal arts college
in southwes~ern Missouri. According to
Dr. James F. Findla;y, president of Drury
College's newly-dedicated Breech School
of Business Administration, named for
Ernest R. Breech, chairman of the board
of Ford Motor Company, . the recentlyadopted curriculum is designed to give
the business administration student a
strong foundation not only in economics
and mathematics, but also in the humanities and in natural and social sciences.
The combined liberal arts-business curriculum resulted from a wide-ranging, twoy(\!ar study particip-ated in by seven Drury
officials, which included the appointment
of Franklin E. Folts, professor of industrial management .a t .the Harvard University
Graduate School of Business Administration
and one-time dean of business administration at the University of Oregon, to coordinate act i vities of the new school.
Together, they devised a four-year program for business administration students
relating traditional business courses

(economics, statistics, accounting, finance,
mathematics, etc.) to those in the humanities,
fine arts and social sciences. The result
is that Drury business students will devote
slightly more than half their time to liberal
arts studies.

Mr. Breech says it is the urgent need for
better-trained, more versatile business leaders that underlies the n:ew philosophy of education represented by the new school named
aft.e r him. "The business executive of today,
more than ever before, deals in human relations," he asserts. "The age of electronic
computers places a · tr-emendous premium on
creative thinking. As the alarm sounds for
a new breed of business leaders, there must
emerge a new philosophy of preparation for
executives--a new pattern in education for
business."--WTG
NEWS FROM NEA
A November 16 release from the National
Education ·Association reveals p.l ans for
a new network television series dramatizing individual college teachers and the
contributions they are making to education.
The announcement was made by William G.
Carr, executive secretary of .t he NEA.
Entitled "Meet the Professor," th~ series
will be produced by the American Broad casting Company in coop.e ration with the
NEA, .and one of its departments, the Association .for Higher Education. This seri.e s
will consist of 13 half-hour programs t o
be broadcast on Sunday afternoons over the
ABC network--to begin January 29, 1961.
Featuring a teacher from a different college or university each week, the program
will present actual teaching experiences,
· in addition to a profile of the professor
in the setting of his institution and community. Purpose of the series is to deepen
the public understanding and image of the
American college teacher as the crucial
agent in the teaching-learning proces,; fundamental to American democracy. A secondary

�- 4 aim is to encourage able young men and
women in schools and colleges to consider
the satisfactions of teaching as a career.

PLACEMENT SERVICE
DAVID R. VAN HORN attended the National
Institutional Teacher Placement Association meeting which was held from November
7 to 10 at the Sheraton-Jefferson Hotel
in St. Louis. Mr. Van Horn served as
recorder for a workshop for people new to
placement service. "One of the interesting agreements this Association is working on," Van Horn said, "is reciprocity
among members to aid students that may be
moving to ether states."

FOR SALE OR RENT
A house with four bedrooms, a den, two baths,
a large living room, dining room, kitchen,
and 25' x 15' playroom in full basement is
available at 17 Shell Lane, Edwardsville.
Other advantages listed are automatic gas
heat, carpeting, dishwasher, gas range,
refrigerator if needed, and gas incinerator.
Rents for $125 per month . For details, contact Russell Baptist--telephone number 1347,
Edwardsville .
Also for rent, North Belt Line, Belleville,
is a five room house ~w1ttl ' bath, built-in
garage and detached garage . Renting for
$125 per month, the house is oil heated,
has central air conditioning. For details,
contact R. L. Medhurst, Belleville. Telephone
ADams 4-1622 • • •

CORNWELL HEADS NEW COMMITTEE
At the December 10 meeting of the SIU
Board of Trustees, CLIFTON CORNWELL was
named to head a committee that will make
a feasibility and engineering study of the
new campus area to determine the practicability of an FM radio station for the Southwestern campus. If the study indicates it
will be practical, an immediat~ application for a frequency assignment will be
made.
STUDENT AFFAIRS
Last month THOMAS D. EVANS and five students at the East St. Louis center conducted a panel discussion at Cahokia High
School for 500 ninth and tenth graders.
The discussion was conducted on a buzz
group basis where students discussed the
topic of the difference between going to
college and high school and submitted
questions from their groups for the panel
to answer. "Naturally," Mr. Evans said,
"the panel worked in the subject of the
Universities Bond Issue." Students serving
on the p,a nel were }larry Rayfield, Bob
Willey, Glenn .Stewart, Nancy Cockrell and
Carolyn Ogletree .

Elmer Schumacher, · 207 Banner, Edwardsville,
has his house listed for sale. Contact him
for further information by calling 383. The
five-room frame house has a bath, full basement and one-car garage • • •
House for sale at 1301 St. Louis Street,
EdwardsvilLe, Illinois. Six rooms - brick
and stone, tile roof, insulated; living
room, dining room and kitchen downstairs,
three bedrooms and bath upstairs, hardwood
floors, fire place, garbage disposal and
new garage; price: $18,.500.00. For additional information, contact Mrs. Bernice
Baird - Telephone Edwardsville 3560W.
FACULTY WOMEN'S CLUB
How to make glow candles and other ingenious
ideas for inexpensive but beautiful Christmas
decorating was demonstrated at the November
17 Faculty Women's Club meeting . The demonstration was given by MRS. DAVID VAN HORN,
a past president of the club.
Almot 50 members attended the meeting, which
was held at the home of MRS. C. E. PEEBLES,
R. R. 1, Edwardsville . The president, MRS.

�- 5 -

. .

G R ARNOLD , Pres ided at the short business meeting. New members were introduced,
as well as ·the club officers. All the
past presidents of the club were presented:
MRS. HOWARD DAVIS, MRS. VAN HORN AND MRS.
MELVIN KAZECK, who served in that order.
The club voted to send a gift to the
Heart Fund bt memory of Dorothy Shaw,
wife of PROFESSOR WILL.IAM SHAW of the
science division. Mrs. Shaw died October
29 after suffering from a heart ailment
for many months. Memorial services for
her were held October 31 at the First
Unitarian Church in Alton.
Table appointments for the refreshment
table were in keeping with the Christmas
theme and Mrs. Van Horn's candles were
used. MRS. NORMAN SHOWERS was chairman
of the social committee, whose members
took turns serving coffee or cranberry
punch. Home made cookies, nuts and mints
were served also. The committee members
included: MRS. RICHARD BAKER, MRS.
WILLIAM BANAGHAN, }iRS. MARINUS BARDOLPH,
MRS. REGAN CARPENTER, MRS. MORRIS CARR,
MRS. ALBERT CARTER, MRS. RAY GWILLIM,
MRS. LYHAN HOLDEN, MRS. DONAL MYER, MRS.
PAUL PHILLIPS and MRS. FREDERICK ZURHEIDE.
The December 15 meeting will be held in
the Boeschenstein Room of the Edwardsville
Public Library. The sp:eaker will be
PRESIDENT DELYTE W. MORRIS. Guests are
welcome.
EAST ST. LOUIS BOND ISSUE
The University received a request from

Mr. J. H. Steuernagel, superintendent
of the East St. Louis School District,
that the Southwestern Illinois Campus of
Southern Illinois University provide consultant services for the school district
campaign to promote a building bond issue.
The bond issue, which will be approximately
$7 million, will be voted on some time
after the first of the year. To promote
the bond issue, the Board of Education

has formulated a Citizens Committee . This
committee is divided into various sub committees. The following faculty members were
appointed to serve as consultants to sub
committees: HARRY H. SMITH, Program of Studie
SEYMOUR MANN and RAYMOND E. TROYER, City
Planning and Corrnnunity Affairs; H. BRUCE
BRUBAKER, Finance; and CAMERON MEREDITH and
RAYMOND J. SPAHN, Public Relations .
UNIVERSITIES BOND ISSUE REPORT
By H. Bruce Brubaker, Chairman
Action Corrnnittee
...
~ .

The Universities Bond Issue campaign is history. All of us can look with satisfaction
upon a job well done . In a report compiled
November 17, Mr. Harold Gibson of Illinois
State Normal University, chairman of the
statewide Universities Bond Issue Committee
reported that "Yes" votes total 2,625,373 ,
"We do not know what the highest legislative
vote will be, he added. The vote for President was about 4,742,000. Half of this
figure would be 2,371,000. The legislative
vote is usually about five per cent less
than the total vote. At this time we have
a quarter of a million more votes than needed for victory."
In the above report we find great satisfaction. I wish to express my gratitude to
all members of the faculty for the support
given the bond issue. Many of you s.erved
as coordinators, helping to set up organizations for promoting the bond issue, and
still more of you served as speakers . Of
equal importance is the fact that all members of the faculty wholeheartedly supported
the bond issue in their contacts with the
public. The bond issue campaign has helped
the University and its faculty members become better known throughout the state.
You will recall that SIU' s share of the
$100,000 statewide faculty and staff fund
to promote the referendum was $25,000.
T1a.is amount was contrib)..lted on the Carbondale
and Southwestern Illinois campuses by faculty
members and civil service employees. SWIC

�- 6 -

staff members contributed roughly $4,600.
Of this amount only $1,000 was sent to
the State Universities Bon~ Issue Committee; the balance was ret.a ined here and
used to pay expenses for such .activities
as the October 1 bond rally, the studentconducted "Torch for Higher Learning"
marathon, travel by coordinators and
speakers, and for printing materials.
The State Universities Bond Issue Committee transferred about $65,000 to Governor
Stratton 1 s State Citizens Commfttee for
the Universities Bond Issue. The balance,
roughly $35,000, was used by campus bond
issue committees and by the State Universities Bond Issue Committee. The major
p.u rposes for which the latter committee
used funds was for printing and shipping
promotional mater.ials. The State Citizens
Committee, using th·e $65,000, concentrated
on radio and television advertising in the
Chicago area. Evidently this was a good
investment, .a s the bond issue carried four
to one in that region. Hundreds of thousands of brochures and sample ballots
were provided by the State Citizens Committee.
During the campaign almost 400 talks were
given in our nine-county area. Of these,
about .350 talks were given by members of
the faculty and 50 were given by laymen.
Faculty members attended dozens of committee meetings, distributed approximately
one-half million pieces of literature and
traveled in excess of 15,000 miles.
Our students contributed greatly to the
success of the campaign. More than 200
of them worked at the polls; dozens of
them distributed literature. Fifty-two
East St. Louis coeds sent 1800 let,ters to
citizens of 84 towns in the state, and
many of them participated in the torch
marathon.
We can truly say that SWIC personnel
helped "Keep the torch of higher education burning" in Illinois .

NEWS FROM THE DIVISIONS
• • • BUSINESS . .
&lt;

' "

Business Education World carried an a rticle
in its November issue written by ETHEL
BLACKLEDGE entitled nDon't Just Teach Shorthand--Use It!" The article was inspired
by a year of travel throughout the continent
of Europe while the author was working and
studying in Wiesbaden, Germany
On November 5 , MARY M. BRADY attended a
meeting of the Illinois Business Teacher
Educators Committee · fn " Springfield . Dr.
Woodson Fishback , coordinator of the Illinois Curriculum Program, from the Office
of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction, met with the group to discuss
curriculum planning • • . • On November~
Miss Brady was in Carbondale where she met
with the National Secretaries Association
at a workshop held on the SIU campus • . •
December 27-29 she will attend the annual
meeting of the National Business Teachers
Association to be held at the Palmer House
in Chicago. At the Tenth Annual Problem
Clinic, which is a special feature of
NBTA, Miss Brady will serve as discussion
leader for the clinic discussing "Problems
of Teachers of High School Clerical Practice."
Because of their popularity, these discussion
sessions are repeated on the program on
both morning .a nd afternoon sessions .

Principal speaker at the Alumni Association
meeting of St. Louis University High School
September 28 was S • . R. REID. He discussed
the "Challenge and Response : Colleges and
Universities in .the 1960's."
. • . EDUCATION
Four members of the Education Division t ook
part in a workshop for substitute tea chers
on October 20 at Central School in Roxana.
About 120 persons attended. DAVID BEAR
presided at the opening session. The wor k shop was part of the Fifth Annua l Conference

�- 7 of Madison County Teachers held in
Edwardsville, Granite City, Roxana and
Triad. REGAN CARPENTER was cha irman of
the general session of the workshop; t h e
keynote address, "This Profession o f Sub stitute Teaching," was given by CAMERON
MEREDITH. Mr. Bear was chairman of the
Planning and Teaching session; Mr .
Carpenter, chairman of the session on
Meeting a Variety of Situations; and
LEONARD WHEAT was chairman of the Classroom Management session
Other recent activities of Mr . Bear include
leading a group discussion November 5 on
"Improving Practices in Reading" at the
state meeting of the Association for Childhood Education. The meeting was held in
Carbondale . November 20-22 he attended
the Illinois School Boards Association
meeting in Chicago . This concerned his
service on the school board at Alton . As
sponsor of the Student Education Association, he attended the state meeting of the
Student Illinois Education Association at
Millikin University November 18-19 . He was
accompanied by six students from the Alton
campus . On October 14 Bear spoke to the
teachers in the Collinsville School Dis trict on "Reading Problems in the Intermediate Grades . "
• • . Mr.• Carpenter addressed the Southwestern Illinois chapters of Future Homemakers of America on October 22; his topic,
"International Understanding . " . . . Mr .
Wheat spoke at the Main Street Methodist
Church in Alton October 30 on the Subject,
"Alcohol and the Church."

. • . Mr. Meredith took part in the Intermediate Conference at Granite City October
20 . His address was entitled "Helping
Teachers Understand Children." The same
day he participated in a Cancer Education
workshop for junior and senior high school
teachers, health educators, school nurses,
and school administrators sponsored by the
St . Clair County Chapter of the American
Cancer Society. His topic was "Psychologist Analyzes Teenage Smoking . " Mr .

Mered i th was in New York City October 30 to
November 1 attending an invitational Confer ence on International .Understanding
sponsored by the American Association for
Colleges of Teacher Education
November was a busy month for Mr . Meredith o
On November 7 h e spoke to the Collinsville
Rotary Club on the subject, "Improving
Human Relations . " November 17 he spoke in
Litchfield during the afternoon on "Helping
Teachers Understand Children." His audience
comprised 60 teachers in the Litchfield School
Distric t. Tha t evening he was in Brighton
where he s poke to -the ..PTA group on "Under standing Adolescents . " "Helping Parents
Understand Children" was his topic November
28 when he talked to the Wood River J unior
Women's Club .
• . • Participants in the High School Conference of the Madison County Teachers'
Conference held at Triad were HOWARD DAVIS
and ROY STEINBROOK. Davis was a consultant
on the topic, "Facing the Issues in Language
Arts" ; Steinbrook served as consultant for
the topic, "Social Studies Trends . "
• H. BRUCE BRUBAKER addressed the
Edwardsvil l e Knights of Columbus November
28 on "Prospects of SIU. "
Mr. and Mrs . FRANK L. EVERSULL at tended the 60th anniversary commemora tive
dinner of the Hall of Fame for Great
Americans which was held October 27 at the
New York University Club of New York . Mr .
Eversull was one of 23 electors who have
served more than 25 years . Each received
a citation and medal inscribed "In noble
character, in world-wide good, they live
forevermore . " Prior to the dinner, the
Eversulls attended a tea given by Governor
LeRoy Collins of Florida and Mrs. Collins .
ALFRED KUENZLI recently a ddressed
the Ethical Society in St . Louis and t he
Unitarian Fellowship in Decatur . The invitations to speak came as a result o f hi s
article , "An Objective Basis for Eth i cs , "
which appeared in a recent issue of The

�- 8 -

Humanist. On December 2 Kuenzli took
part in a forum sponsored by "Americans
for Freedom of All Peoples" at .the Trinity
Lutheran Church in Alton.
• • . MARK TUCKER was in Chicago October
27 and 28 attending a meeting of the State
Council of Exceptional Children . . •
On October 14 and 15 LAWRENCE TALIANA
participated in the 16th Annual Conference
of the Illinois Guidance and Personnel
Association as a discussion leader in one
of the group discussions centering about
"Guidance Services--Their True Perspective
in the Total Educational Program. " •
Taliana played the part of a college professor in a thirty-minute film which was
premiered October 1 at .A lton High School.
Produced by the American Vocational Association, the film is to be used to promote a membership drive for the AVA and
will be shown throughout the United States.
The film was shot in the Alton High SchoolOlin Vocational Building and local talent
was used in the cast.
. • • FINE ARTS • • •
"The State Supervisor of Music" is the
title of an article by LLOYD BLAKELY
published in the fall issue of the
Journal of Research in Music Education.
It is a study of trends, practices and
functions of the state supervisor of
music within the State Departments of
Education.
. . • ROBERT HAWKINS is moderating a
series of radio programs, SIU on the Air,
over station WOKZ-Alton (1570). The November 20 panel concerned the problem of over
population. PHlLIP VOGEL and MARTHA ANN
ROGERS, Social Studies Division, and
DIMITER WASSEN, Business Division, participated. On November 27 a panel of
faculty members answered the question,
"What is the Function of a University."
The December 4 program was a student debate on foreign policy : GUNTER REMMLING,

Social Studies, spoke November 13 on Music
and Society , with special reference to
German jazz .
. . . November ll-12, EVELYN BUDDEMEYER,
GLEN HOWERTON, ESTELLE MILOVICH and JOHN
RICHARDSON attended the Illinois Art Education Association convention in Bloomington.
On the twelfth, the four, with a group of
students studying printmaking, viewed exhibitions of fine arts prints at Illinois
State Normal University, Normal •• .
Richardson delivered a speech entitled
"Resourcefulness and Modern Painting" to
the Rotary Club of Wood.. River on October 31.
. Members of the Alton center's art
faculty have expressed appreciation to
staff members who participated in the Homecoming Art Exhibit by lending art work
owned by them. '~t is a compliment to the
University faculty that none of the work
submitted was rejected." Those who participated were: JOHN ADES, EVELYN BUDDEMEYER,
ROBERT DUNCAN, PAUL GUENTHER, LYMAN HOLDEN,
VERNON HORNBACK, GLEN HOWERTON, NICHOLAS
JOOST, RUTH KILCHENMANN, JOHN KNOEPFLE,
ESTELLE MILOVICH, JOHN RICHARDSON, HEREBERT
ROSENTHAL, NORBERT SCHMITT, PETER SIMPSON
and ERIC STURLEY • • •
Howerton was represented in the competitive
Kansas Designer Craftsman Show held annually
in Lawrence, Kansas. An ebony wood sculpture
entitled "Madonna and Child" was accepted as
well as a piece of jewelry of silver and
ebony • • .
Mrs. Milovich was represented recently in
a competition sponsored by the Church of
the Immacolata--Art for the Christian Home
--with a water color still life of fruit ·•
the studies of Mr. and Mrs. Milovich were '
included in the annual St. Louis Artists
Guild tour of studies of well known St.
Louis ar.tists •
Mrs. Buddemeyer addressed a luncheon meeting
of the Anna D. Sparks Alliance in Alton on
November 2, choosing as her topic "Daumier-The Man and his Art . " On November 15 she

�- 9 discussed "The Role of the Home in Enriching the Child's Art Experience and
Understanding" before the Mothers Club
of Horace Mann School, Alton . . . Mrs.
Buddemeyer holds an honorary membership
in the Art Directors Club of St. Louis
as representative from SIU's Southwestern
Campus.

campus I have scarcely had a minute to
myself . I have worked constantly at
initiating the new program and becoming
a part of campus and community life . My
sisters have scolded until I finally got
letters off to them at Thanksgiving time,
my first communication since the initial
postal card .

. • . KENWYN BOLDT and his wife, Frina,
played at the Wood River High School
assembly last September 29, and on October 10 played for the Federated Women's
Clubs at the College Avenue Presbyterian
Church in Alton. On November 15 Mr. Boldt
gave a recital at Pearson Hall
at
McKendree College; on December 2 he presented a program in .the Alton Auditorium,
featuring works of Mozart, Prokofieff,
Bartok and Ravel.

I have loved the beauty of the West Virginia
hills. The autumn was a veritable wonderland, with the most gorgeous variety of
brilliant colors I have ever seen. The campus is located on a hill overlooking the
village of Philippi with its one-track
railroad winding· around · the bank of the
Taigart Valley River . With the late snows
the view across the valley looks like something on a Christmas card .

. • • On December 11, the Alton section
of HERROLD HEADLEY's Southwestern Illinois
Chorophonic Society presented Handel's
Messiah . The East St. Loui,s section gave
the presentation December 6 in the auditorium of the East St . Louis center .
• • . A pre-Christmas art fair is open to
the public in Loomis Hall. The fair includes oil painting, water colors, ceramics, block prints, drawings, brayer
paintings and sculpture. "Those who are
searching for unusual and memorable gifts
have an unusual opportunity to purchase,
at prices not at all in line with the
quality work of astonishingly high caliber;•
according to JOHN RICHARDSON.
"Block
prints, for example, are available at onehalf to one-fifth their normal market. va.lue."
Part of the money received during the sale
will be donat.ed to the Art Club, sponsoring organization. The gallery is open
from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p . m. on weekdays •• •
DEAN GOING is in receipt of the following
letter from MARY BELLE SMITH who is on
leave this year t.o Alderson-Broadus College,
Philippi, West Virginia .
Dear Dean Going:
Since landing on the Alderson-Broadus

The first land battle of the Civil War
was fought at Philippi. Clarksburg, 23
miles away, was the home of Stonewall
Jackson. At a little church in Grafton,
15 miles away, the observance of Mother's
Day originated
The fundamental speech course has gone
in as a requirement for every student,
but because of the present heavy required
schedule for freshmen, I was not successful in having it open to them. I now
have three sections with 29, 26 and 21
enrolled . My students represent 34 states;
the greatest numbers are from New York
and the New England states and Pennsylvania
Just now I am having a wonderful time at
Ford Foundation expense observing the
inter-institutional teaching by television
in the Oregon state system of higher education . (Miss Smith's letter was written
while staying at the Eugene Hotel in
Eugene,Oregon.) I spent yesterday on the
University of Oregon campus. Today I
visited Oregon State College at Corvallis,
Oregon College of Education at Monmouth
and Willamette University at Salem. These
are the participating institutions . They
hope to join soon with Portland State
College. This makes the best courses from
each institution available to students at

�- 10 -

the other institutions. In some courses
thousands are enrolled.
I hope to
attend the annual convention of the
Speech Association of America in St.
Louis during the holidays.
• . • HUMANITIES •
On October 19 RUTH KILCHENMANN spoke
at the meeting of the Greenville PTA
and demonstrated Foreign Languages in
Elementary Schools • • • Die Brucke, .a
German renunificat.ion paper with national circulation, .gave half a page to
Mrs. Kilchenmann 1 s FLES program activities and the Germa:n language program
in general. The article, written by Mrs.
Kilchenmann, included .a picture of a FLES
class • • • Gerrit Memming, n;:ttional
chairman of the 'German FLES program, recently announced the appointment of Mrs.
Kilchenmann as chairman of the Illinois
German FLES promotion committee . • •

The Times Literary Supplement last month
advertised the British pub;Lication of the
diar!es of Captain Marryat by the Nicholas
Vane Press in London. It was edited by
JULES ZANGER. The American edition is
from the Indiana University Press • • •
MARION TAYLOR of the English faculty
writes that, beginning November 10, her
address for four months is in care of the
English Department, University of Saugar,
Saugar, M.P., India. Of India, Mrs.
Taylor writes, 11 The place grows on you,
and frankly, I have never felt healthier
in my life • • • Also, the Fulbrighters
I met at the Orientation Conference (in
Delhi) last month seem to be of the highest
type, one professor from Yale, one head of
the Oriental Studies at the University of
Pennsylvania, one a professor at Princeton,
and so · on. Harvard, Smith College, etc.,
students and professors also are all over
the place, and they all seem so good
(sometimes wonder how I ever got in). 11
(Editorial comment: Mrs. Taylor is being
too modest!)

PAUL GUENTHER will be heading the faculty
committee responsible for the Humanities
Honors Program for the winter quarter , 1961.
Other members of the committee, which rotates its chairmanship each quarter , are
NICHOLAS&lt;).&gt;.JOOST and W. WINSLOW SHEA o • o
Mrs . Kilchenmann, Guenther and BERTRAND
BALL were on the Northwestern University
campus November 18-19 to acquaint themselves
with the linguatrainer in operation, in the
foreign language laboratory system of the
university. The Humanities Division here
is planning to order a Linguatrainer in the
near future in ord·e r · tha·t · our foreign language faculty may teach the various lan guages with the newest and most efficient
audial aids. About 260 students are enrolled in the F-L program at the Southwestern
Campus
Mr. Joost has been granted a Fulbright
lectureship, according to wor~ received
this month from the State Department . He
has been selected by the Board of Foreign
Scholarships to lecture in India on American literature, the assignment to begin
July 1, 1961.
RUSSELL KIRK recently spoke in Alton on
11
What is a Liberal Education?" under the
auspices of the Athenaeum, the undergraduate
organization for the division. The talk •~­
was open to students, faculty, and the
general public and was well attended •
At a meeting of 42 students and eight
faculty members, held in the student lounge
of the East St. Louis Center, as a preliminary to organizing an undergraduate
club for the Humanities Division, JOHN
KNOEPFLE read a number of his poems • • •
At the November meeting of the Athenaeum ,
JOHN ADES, read a paper on Charles Lamb.
The paper to be read for the January 1961
meeting will deal with the writing of the
American realist, William March, and will
be given by Dean Going.

�- 11 I'

• SCIENCE
TSO-PIN WANG was married December 18 to
Youn-yi Ting at the First Presbyterian
Church in Carbondale. The wedding was
followed by a reception in the church
social room. The Wangs are living in
Hartford at 206 West Fifth Street. Among
those attending the wedding from this
campus were Mr. and Mrs. GEORGE ARNOLD.
• • • The 196 volumes of "Berichte Der
Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft presented to the Southwestern Illinois Campus' library by Olin Mathieson Chemical
Corporation are to be housed in the
library at SIU's East St. Louis center.
According to WILLIAM PROBST, "These
volumes represent the very earliest
journals in the field of organic chemistry
and will be invaluable to the chemistry
faculty and students. It would be difficult to estimate their value in dollars
and cents."

affair, which was open to the public, was
held at Trinity Lutheran Church . • •
Social Forces, a social study periodical;
has accepted for publication an article by
GUNTER REMMLING, entitled "Karl Mannheim:
Revision of an Intellectual Portrait."
• • • STANLEY KIMBALL has been named chairman of the programming committee of the
Greater St . Louis Historical Society • • •
On October 23 Kimball served in the pulpit
on Layman's Day at the Main Street Methodist
Church, Alton. His sermon was called "Four
Needs of the Modern Christian." On November
8 he spoke on "Soviet Morality" at the
Alton PEO dinner meeting, and November 15
addressed the Business and Professional
Women's Club of Greater Alton on ."Russian
History and National Security . " An article
by Kimball on "Charles Anthon and the
Egyptian Language" appea:red in the October
issue of The Era. He has been asked to
write an artic1e on the "Prague National
Theatre" for Grolier's Encyclopedia.

SOCIAL STUDIES • • •
• • • INDUSTRIAL AND TECHNICAL PROGRAM
HYMAN FRANKEL, now on a one-year leave,
visited the campus recently. Frankel is
currently heading a delinquency study
with the National Probation and Parole
Association. Mr. and Mrs. Frankel expect
to go to England in April on a research
assignment . • •
KllaT GLASER's review of United States
Foreign Policy: Ideology and Foreign
Affairs will appear in the January issue
of The Freeman, a monthly published by
the Foundation for Economic Education of
Irving-on-Hudson, New York. The work reviewed is a study made by the Harvard
University Center for International Affairs
for the Senate Committee on Foreign ReLations.
In December MELVIN KAZECK, Mr. Glaser,
and ALFRED E. KUENZLI (Education Division)
took part in a forum sponsored by "Americans for Freedom of All Peoples." The

Eleven representatives of transportation
and industrial firms meeting with SIU
officials in St. Louis October 19 recommended an expansion of the University's
traffic education program. The advisory
committee recommended expansion of the
East St. Louis non-credit program which
includes courses in Rates and Tariffs and
Traffic and Terminal Management, according
to H. J. Harris, Monsanto Chemical Company,
committee chairman. It was also suggested
that the St. Louis .area, ranking among the
three largest transporatation centers in
the c10untry, should have a fully accredited
program leading to a degree in Traffic
Management •
The November issue of Journal of the American
Society of Training Directors carried an article on "Coaching and Counseling for Middle
Management" written by EMERY R. CASSTEVENS
and Bill C. Lovin . Lovin is supervisor of

�- 12 training for Granite City Steel Company .
The article is based on the premise that
"The best man to develop a foreman is his
general foreman" and the article pr esents
a program to help him do it .
JOB

OPPORTUNITY~OR

FACULTY WIFE

The Student Employment and Placement Office
is looking for a supervisor in volunteer
service. The applicant must have a b.ach-

elor•s degr ee , preferably in one of the
social sciences, with a combination psy chology, sociol ogy, education and/or personnel administration. Experience in these
areas would be helpful : teaching, admin.i strative or supervisory capacity, and responsible for personnel functions. Minimum age
level, 28. For further information , contact DAVID VAN HORN. His Alton number is
HOw$-r d 2-0001 , .extension 51 or 46; on Tuesdays and Thursdays ,,he is at East St . Louis ,
where his telephone number is BRidge 4- 2100 ,
.ext.ens ion 57 .

CREDIT UNION REPORT
On October 31, the SWICSIU Employees Credit Union completed rii.J:l.e . m~nths of .operation.
The success of the Credit Union during this period has far exceeded. .the expectations
of the directors when operations began, according to JOE R. SMALL, trea surer. The
following data reveals the rapid growth:
INTEREST NET PROFIT
ND OF MONTH MEMBERS BORROWERS LOANS OUTSTANDING SHARE DEPOSITS RECEIVED .or (LOSS)

$-----

$ (32. 75 )

ebruary

21

0

$--------

$1285.00

larch

27

2

400.00

1978.00

pril

32

8

1454. 00

2286 . 00

4 . 00

(29. 96)

lay

38

10

1534.00

2569.00

14.75

(23 . 31)

une

40

13

1607.70

2599.00

24.83

(14.23)

uly

42

13

1732.23

2794.00

36.86

( 5.12)

ugust

42

13

1504.51

3154.00

53.79

11.16

eptember

49

20

2401.32

3758.03

60.18

17.33

ctober

56

26

3895.79

4003.03

97.07

49.72

Balance Sheet
As of October 31, 1960

(32.75)

Income Statement
For nine months ending October 31 , 1960

~sets

Interest Received
pans
~vings

Account
Account
Total Assets

~ecking

$ 3,895.79
300.00
370.96
$ 4,566.75

~abilities

ptes Payable
~mbership Shares
~trance Fees
~t Profit - (nine months)
~otal Liabilities

Less Expenses:
Incorporation fees
Bonding of officers
Insurance on loans
Bank charges
Total Expenses

$

$

500 . 00
4003 . 03
14.00
49.72
4566.75

Net Profit for Nine Months

$9 7. 07
$23 . 75
9.00
6. 93
7.67
47 . 35
$49 . 72

�- 13 -

RESIDENT ADDRESSES FACULTY WOMEN
peaking December 15 to the Faculty Women's
lub of the Southwestern Illinois Campus,
f which he recently assumed personal diection, he listed the following steps preceding construction of the new campus:
he first will involve setting up a bonding authority--a three man group including
he Governor, the treasurer, and the audior--to prepare general revenue bonds, to
ell them, and to hold and distribute the
oney. From these funds the legislature
ill need to make appropriations to the
niversities for specific purposes. The
arliest date by which monies can become
vailable is July 1 unless the legislature
nacts emergency legislation which requires
two-thirds majority.
s soon as money has become available from
he sale of bonds and the legislature has
de appropriations, construction projects
ased on completed plans and specifications
be started.
President indicated that ordinarily
ne can anticipate completion of a major
uilding within a period of from one to .
wo years from the time of the awarding
f contracts. In the case of the Edwardsille campus, he pointed out, all construeion projections must of necessity be
eared to the a£quisition of land upon
hich construction is to take place beause buildings can not be constructed
n land not owned by the university. The
niversity presently owns more than 1,400
. Morris also called attention to the
act that there must be available easy
ccess to utility structures.
e announced that architects were working
n preliminary plans for three buildings
f the central group for the new campus:
he library, a combined administration and
ervices building, and a student center
not .to be built with state money), and
aidtt was hoped that with careful planning

the first $25 million could be made to provide for approximately 5,000 students.
One of the difficulties in the first phase of
construction of the new campus is that a disproportionately large amount of money will
have to go into basic utilities . All supply
lines, for example, will have to be sized
for the ultimate size of the campus. It would
not be economical, he said, to provide sixinch water mains when 12-inch or 18-inch
mains eventually would be needed.
President Morris also went into the matter
of the programming for .tb.e }miversity, which
will be to develop in terms of good basic
university education and one geared to the
needs of the area in which the university is
being developed. The program of the university
should be developed in such a way, he said,
that there can be continuing adaptation to
the needs of the total area served by the
entire university, with a view to tying in
wherever possible the programs of the Carbondale campus so the maximum impact of each
campus can be made possible .
Approximately 50 women .a ttended the meeting,
held in the Edwardsville Public Library . Chairman of the social hour was MRS. SEYMOUR MANN "
Her committee included MRS . CARL ALFORD : MRS o
KENWYN BOLDT, MRS. MILTON BYRD, MRS. ROBERT
ERICKSON, MRS. THOMAS EVANS, MRS. FRANK EVERSUL4
MRS. EDWARD FERGUSON, MRS. S. D. LOVELL, MRS.
HOWARD PFEIFER, ~S. JOE SMALL, and MRS . ROBERT
STEINKELLNER.
POSSIBLE NEW TRAINING CENTER
The Southern Illinois University board of
trustees Saturday (Dec . 10) authorized University officials to confer with representatives
of The Tractor and Implement Division of the
Ford Motor Co. concerning a cooperative approach
to a new training center to be established by
the Division .
Under consideration is the leasing of SIU land
near Edwardsville, with the likelihood that
this acreage would be supplemented later thro~
the leasing of privately-owned lands . Represent-

�- 14 -

atives of the Ford Company said they had
been considering sites in three midwestern
states. A Ford spokesman said land available here meets the Ford needs because it
is a combination of bottom land and hilly
acreage and is adjacent to a growing university. A proposed lease would run for
three years, with option for renewal for
three years or longer. All improvements
on the land, such as farm buildings and ·
classrooms and other facilities for Ford
trainees, eventually would go to the University or, if University officials desired, would be removed when the lease
expires .
ACADEMIC ROBES AVAILABLE
If you are interested in buyirg custom
made academic robes, contact JAMES BEASLEY,
book store manager, extension 241, for an
appointment to be measured. According
to Beasley, a variety of styles and pric.es
are available through E. R. Moore Company,
makers of caps and gowns. Appointments
may be made now through February 15, 1961 .

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Vol.l, No.2

October 18, 19 5 7

Compiled weekly by Information Service, Southwestern Illinois ~esidence Office,
Southern Illinois University, for the staff members of the Res~dence Centers, the
Newsletter is made possible by the cooperation of staff members who have contributed
news items.

-------------------F-A-C-U-L-T-¥- ~ N-E-W-S-L-E-T-T-E-R

A new class in Materials Handling at Granite City last week brought to a record
550 the number of persons enrolled in the program offered by SIU's Division of Technical and Adult Education, according to Supervisor Chelsea Bailey : . . .. ·'·
The program, run in cooperation with industries, also offers courses in such work
as practical psychology and effective speaking for supervisors; industrial economics,
engineering, safety, and report writing; cost and quality control; and labor- s upervision relations. Courses carry no credit toward a degree.
Formulated in 1956 to meet the demand from industry to provide employers and-employees with the "tools of the trade " and to prepare leaders for intelligent participation in their work, the program was an immediate success.
Competent specialists from the area, including Ph.D.'s in economics and psychology;
cost accountants and industrial and mechanical engineers from industry; and communica- :
tions teachers from high schools and universities comprise the faculty.
·
Bailey came to SIU's Southwestern Illinois Residence Office in East Saint Louis
last August from an assignment of more than two years in Baghdad, where his friends
included a sheik in the dairy business (milk shiek?).
Mr. Bailey called attention to an industrial test given by secretaries to prospective bosses, recently released by an East Saint Louis .paper. The test asks the
hiring official to count the F's in the following sentence, reading it only once:
FEDERAL FUSES ARE THE
RESULT OF YEARS OF SCIENTIFIC
STUDY COMBINED WITH
THE EXPERIENCE OF YEARS.
(Turn to the bottom of the next page for rating key.)

-------------------Jerry J. Fear, Field Director of the East Saint Louis Community Development Program, opened an office this week in Room 234 of the Broadview Hotel in East Saint Louis.
Jerry, an SIU political science graduate, has been working in the East Saint Loui~
area since August. His work in community development at Cairo last year received na- ·
tion-wide press coverage. In line with Dean See's policy of supplying the faculty of
the Residence Centers with background material on the various SIU activities, Fear
told Faculty Newsletter that the Department of Community Development was established
as a part of SIU's program of aiding in bringing about the full development of the
human resources and natural wealth of southern Illinois .

�.,
- 2 -

He said that his immediate superior, Richard . hl . Poston, known throughout
southern Illinois as "the doctor of sick towns, " envisages community development
as encouraging the development of a community l~fe in which all_of the mem~ers of
the community may join together to build an env1ronment best su1ted to the1r growth,
development, and happiness. One of Jerry's first objectives in a new assignment is
to get the community to see itself as a ,.,hole. He says in many communities he finds
an assortment of many agencies and groups, all pulling separately, and in most instances
without knowing what the others are doing.
The program, began as a one-man operation by Poston in September, 1953, now has
a staff of 16. Its activities have been the subject of 90 Radio-TV shows, including
Ed Murrow's "See It Now " show on the famous Eldorado community project.

---------------------Dr. Howard Davis, student affairs, Alton, spoke before two groups in different
communities last week. On Wednesday evening, October 9, he talked to the Wood River
Lion's Club on their annual "Teacher Appreciation Day" on the rewards of being a
teacher. All of the teachers in the dist~ict were present.
Howard mentioned some of the things a community should expect to do for its
teachers, and told them they could expect the cost of education to mount. He predicted an increasing shortage of teachers if schools did not make a greater effort
to attract persons into the teaching profession. He called attention also to the
fact that people are living longer and are demanding a longer period of formal training.
On Thursday evening, October 10, Student Affairs Supervisor Davis spoke in a
school district which had scheduled an election on a bond issue. Mitchell School in
Granite City, whose PTA he addressed, ,-;ras not slated to share in this particular
bond issue. He stressed the responsibility of citizens for maintaining schools in
the entire school district.

S. D. Lovell, government and history, East Saint Louis, has had an article
on taxation accepted for publication by the Atlanta Economic Revie\v. Title: "The
Adequacy of the Property Tax as the Principal Source of Municipal Revenue." The
review, published by Georgia State College, has carried other recent articles of
his on state-local fiscal relationships.
Lovell, a native of Tennessee and a graduate of its state university, came to
S!U from Georgia State College. His M.A. is from the University of Georgia, and
his Ph.D. (in political science) is from the Ohio State University. He lives at
6003 West Main in Belleville with his wife and three children. (Dr. Lovell declined
to comment when asked whether he was an authority on filling out income tax returns.-ed.)
~--------------------

Virgil Seymour, sociology, East Saint Louis, was back on the pay roll this
week after a bout with the Asiatic flu.
RATING KEY FOR BOSS'S TEST:
There are six F's in the sentence. If the boss spots four, he is above average
and would be inclined to notice the length of her coffee breaks. If he gets five,
she'd hesitate to work for him, because he'd be sure to be too observing. Six would
make him an impossible tyrant. Bailey says that most bosses get only three.

�..

- 3 -

John Knoepfle, English, East Saint Louis, disclosed t~is week that he has been
accepted by Nimrod for his poetry. He has published also ~n Today, Four Quarters,
and Yale Review.
Knoepfle (pronounced Nofle) came here from Oh~o, where he started work on a
river project two years ago while conducting.a ser1es of TV programs for WCET on
the Ohio River. Since becoming acquainted w~th some of the men who served on stern
wheel and side wheel packets and tows, he has recorded 60 full-hour tapes of the recollections of these old-timers.
'
The tapes deposited \vith the Division of Inland Rivers of the Public Library
of Cincinnati ~nd Hamilton County, were recorded wherever the old-timers could be
found -- in the band room of night clubs, in desolate rooming houses, in the boiler
rooms of hospitals, and on excursion boats.
John, who writes his (meditative) poetry when he has time, modestly declined to
submit a sample of it for this newsletter.
---------~-----------

Professor Horace B. Huddle, chemistry, East Saint Louis, announced this week
that almost daily shipments of new equipment and supplies for the science labs are·
arriving at the Tenth Street campus, where both day and evening students take their
lab work.

Apat on the back. From the office of the executive dean comes an end-of-thefirst-month-of-classes gr~eting:
"Congratulations on a job well done~ UndeJ' the very trying conditions of the
past rather hectic month, it has been most gratifying to see the development of such
a fine esprit de corps on the part of the Residence Center faculty and staff. The
days ahead promise to be busy ones for each of us, with almost unlimited opportunities
for professional growth. Ever present in our work is the satisfaction gained from the
knowledge that we are providing a much-neede~ educational service for the people of this
area.
"We are most fortunate in having the fullest kind of support and cooperation from
the Carbondate faculty and administrative staff, without which the task before us would
be practically insuperable. The real test and challenge for the future l'ies in our
ability to retain and justify this confidence now being placed in our program. This
all-important feeling of oneness between the Carbondale staff and ours can best be assured through the development of a quality program ·in the Residence Centers.
"As we look to the next crucial years in the growth and development of the programs of the Southwestern Illinois Residence Office, we not only welcome but request
your suggestions for improvement. The future is what we make it."

--------------------Dr. John Schnabel, registrar and admissions, Alton and East Saint Louis, served
as registration chairman for the annual convention of the Association of College Admissions Counselors at Excelsior Springs, Missouri, October 12-15.
John said. th~t a~cording to cloakroom reports on enro llnient, colleges in the MidWest are not f 1 nd~ng ~t substantially harder this year than last to make room for the
students who seek admission.

�- 4 -

In the East the high school counselors are looking fo: colleges that will accept
their students, i.e., those of their students who are not 1n the upper one-fourth of
their senior classes.
,
.
.
Although the problem of getting into the college of one s c~o1~e in the M1d-West
is not expected to become crucial before 1960, John says the adm1~s1ons officers in
all parts of the country are laying the groundwork now for effect1ve cou~seling for
1960 admissions.
.
The admissions policy of the association is to counsel.each student so as to help
h1m find the right college for his needs (whether or not th1s happens to be the college
which is paying the salary of the admissions counselor concerned.)
Speakers at this convention, ~hich had the best attendance of any ACAC convention
to date, included: Dr. Lloyd s. Michael~ superintendent of Evanston, Illinois, High
School; Frank H. Bowles, president of the College Entranc.e Examination Board; his assistant, F. L. MacMitchell; and H. R. Bartle, lawyer, former president of Missouri
Valley College.

--------------------Professor Joseph w. Bird, business management, Alton and East Saint Louis, this
week addressed his second community group within a fortnight . The Men's Club of the
First Baptist Church of Upper Alton, with their wives as guests, heard Dr. Bird charge
them with the responsibility of setting standards and leading the way in the development of their children.
He reminded them that all of the habits developed by the families in the home go
to build up the habit patterns which are to carry the children through school and college. ("I am the sum total of every experience I have ever had.") Therefore it is up
to the parents to see that their children have experiences which will enable them to
establish proper habit patterns, --- patterns which result from essential experiences
and which are not merely a veneer.
Dr. Bird's talk of October 3 before the Exchange Club of Alton received front
page coverage in the local press (S.ee Alton Evening Telegraph for October 4. - ed.)

Next week's Faculty Newsletter will carry a report on Dr. Robert Duncan, English,
Alton, who is scheduled to present the sermon at the Unitarian Church (Third Street,
Alton) on Sunday, October 27.

Dr. Eric Baber to address SIU Alumni
Five me~bers of the SIU Alumni Board of Directors are expected to attend the October 21st meeting of the Madison County Division of the Alumni Association, Robert Odaniell,
SIU Director of Alumn~ announced today. After a meeting at the Horace Mann School at
7:15p.m., the group will be conducted on tours of the Alton Residence Center by SIU
students.
At 8:00 p.m. Dr. Baber, director of the Alton Residence Center, will speak to
the alumni and friends of the university. After the address, refreshments will be
served at the Horace Mann School cafeteria. Faculty members are invited to make reser~
vations with Mrs. Hazel Towery, 1705 Spring Avenue, Nameoki Station, Granite City, Illinois.
·
NEWSLETTER URGENTLY REQUESTS to be put on the mailing list for all college bulletins,
directories, class schedules, and announcements to .student or faculty. (Dean See indi~
cated today that in some instances the copies he receives of such material are quite
ancient. - ed ·)

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