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F ilC' ULTY
N E !I S

B UL L E TI N

Southern Illinois University Resi dence Center s

February, 1959

Vo 1 ume

II,

No • Lf

�FEB!RUARY J

VoL ..

1959
FACULTY

.,
. "'

NEWS

II~

No •. 4

BULLETIN

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

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

..

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

~\Tilson

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

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

l~AY

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

.

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

~vho

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

�-3-

..

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

.
....

GIVES

ILLUSTR~TED

LECTURE

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

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

Lf

at a meeting of the Mothers Club at

�-4-

BRIDGE--AN EXTRA CURRICULAR ITEH
"'

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

F~lli

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

�-5PROMOTE INTEREST IN MUSIC

..-·

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

•

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

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

�-6In the Easter Parade

•

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

i

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

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

�-8-

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

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

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

�-

('

-

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

..

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

�..

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

CALENDill~

YEAR 1958

BOOKS:
Blakely, Lloyd George

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

Brady, Hary M.

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

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

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

Headley, Herrold E.

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

•

ARTICLES:
Baker, Richard C.

11

Brady, Hary H.

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

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

�Articles:
Byrd, Milton Bruce

0.

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

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

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

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

•

Davis, Howard V.

Duncan, Robert

Tv.

Going, Hilliam T.

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

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

• &gt;

�Articles:
Joost, Nicholas

"The Importance
Sir,ma Bulletin.

o~

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

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

11

••

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

Jurjevich, Joseph C.

11

Kazeck, Helvin E.

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

Kilchenmann, Ruth J,

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

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

11

Knoepfle, John

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

Kuenzli, Alfred E.

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

,.

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

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

Love 11 , S . D.

Vol. 47.

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

r.

�Articles:
Marks, Babette

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

Hartin, Kenneth E.

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

..
o.

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

Rosenthal, Herbert H.

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

Steinkellner, Robert H.

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

Taylor, Harion

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

Harren, Ed\vin

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

r.

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