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AUG 3 t 19'65

AUGUST 1966

�NEWS

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BUL L E T I N

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SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY -- EDWARDSVILLE
August, 1966
Vol. X, No . 1
Mildred Arnold , Editor
Information Service, Station 3600
Edwardsville, Illinois
•

SID BEGINS YEAR-LONG DEDICATION
OF ITS EDWARDSVILLE CAMPUS
"A good university," President DELYTE H.
MORRIS told the hundreds who gat hered
May 13 i n the Lovejoy Memoria l Library
to begin the year -l ong dedication of
SID's Edwardsville campus , "is one where
grea t teachers teach and inspir e students
to study, ponder things of the mind and
spirit and develop the talents t hey possess . It mus t be a depository of the
knowledge of mankind, to be analyzed and
interpreted for future generations.

"Many of us in t he University feel," he
continued, "that the University has a
responsibility of considering and teaching what comes after schooling. The
modern university, i:.f +it· he re.al is tic,
in my judgment must orient and relate
itself to the world outside. The university must have roots in the society
t hat supports it. In short t erm and
long term, we call it service. It must
orient and relate itself to the wor ld
itself. Our faculty should be citizens
of the world and add what we c an to
the solution of (continued on page 15)

EDITOR ' S NOTE: In this issue of t he News
Bullet in we have tried to catch up with
informat ion received since our last publication date, March 1966. Ordinarily issued monthly, the Bulletin was discontinued
temporarily las t spring because of budget

restrictions. Beginning in October,
we hope to resume on a month l y basis.
Thanks for bearing with us as you
r ead what hardly seems news anymore
because most of it happened months ago .

,

�Scene at the barbecue-fish fry

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With Pres. Morris are vice
presidents Ruffner, Rendleman
and Tenny

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President Morris gave a · brief
history of the new campus and
paid tribute
to those who
.
.
helped with its founding
•

Hugh Nenninger was on hand to see that the program was
televised · over SIU' s WSIU on Channel
8
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John Rendleman vice
president of business
affairs read Governor
Kerner's address
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Folding chairs doubled
for tables at lunch time

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- 3 BUSINESS DIVISION NEWS
WALTER BLACKLEDGE and his wife are coauthors of an article entitled "Supervising Women Employees" written for the
Executive Series of the Dartnell Corporation of Chicago and London. The firm
specializes in publications for business
and government. • • • The power of the
press works in interesting and mysterious
ways, says Blackledge. On March 5, 1965,
Sylvia Porter ran a column on some research coupled with an article by the
SIU professor and his wife entitled
"Seven Steps to Successful Supervision
of Women." The couple received mail
from all over the U. S. and Canada requesting copies of this material. "There
has been a continuous stream of requests
from educators, businessmen, libraries,
and various associations since," said
Blackledge. The Kelly Girl Service,
a national organization for providing
business employers with supplemental
help, put a summary of this article in
its newsletter. This is just one example of the material which has been
picked up by corporate newsletters,
inserted in other types of publications,
given in speeches, and used at conferences throughout the country. As a
result of Miss Porter's column, Harper
&amp; Row are interested in the possibility
of a full-length book on the subject.
• • • MARY MARGARET BRADY was named
"Distinguished Business Educator of the
Year" by the Illinois Business Education
Association, meeting last March in connection with a two-day convention in
Chicago of the Illinois Vocational Association. Inaugurated last year, the
Distinguished Service Award is given
to a person with at least 15 years of
active service in business education on
the local, state and national levels and
for professional writing in the field.
Head of the secretarial sciences faculty,
Prof. Brady organized the Southwest Area
Business Education Association and has
served as co-chairman since its inception.
She is a member of the executive board of
the Illinois Vocational Association and

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chairman of its publications committee.
Co-author of two textbooks in business
education, she has also written many
articles for publication. • • • Miss
Brady gave an address entitled "Putting
That Tiger in Teaching" at the April 15
meeting in St. Louis of the Administrative Management Society. Her
, suggestions were based on the need for competence and creativity. Prof. Brady suggests .. ~~a~ ~ . teacher should be competent
in: 1) Basic philosophy and total curriculum for business education; 2) research;
3) knowledge of community needs, and
4) teaching techniques.
• • • CHARLES DRAKE has been included
in the survey of academic and business
economists which was conducted by the
Chase Manhattan Bank of New York. The
bank is seeking opinions of professional
economists concerning such currently
important issues as inflation, wageprice guide lines, taxation, etc. Results of the survey will be available
in a forthcoming issue of the bank's
bimonthly publication, Business in
Brief. This is the second year Drake
has been contacted in the bank's annual
survey. Drake attended the spring meeting of the Industrial Relations Research
Association held in Milwaukee May 5-7.
The meeting emphasized collective bargaining in the public service and included addresses by such authorities
as Arthur M. Ross, Commissioner of
Labor Statistics, and John W. Macy,
Jr., chairman of the U. s. Civil Service Commission.
• • • The following members of the
economics faculty were in Columbus, 0.,
April 14-16 for meetings of the Midwest
Economic Association: LEO COHEN,
CHARLES DRAKE, LOUIS DRAKE, RASOOL
HASHIM!, DAVID LUAN, ANN SCHWIER,
JOSEPH THORSON and JOSEPH LONGI. The
meetings covered such economic topics
as theory, money and banking, finance,
international trade, labor and statistics. In attendance were more than 500
economists engaged in both business and
academic pursuits in the Midwest •

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. • • JOHN J. GLYNN has been asked by
Secretary of Commerce John T. Connor to
continue as a member of the Regional Export Expansion Council unti l June 30, 1967.
Regional councils ar e set up by t h e federal government to aid export expansion
programs in order to maintain this country ' s international economic position .
Glynn was first named to t h e council in
1963 by former Secretary of Commerce
Luther B. Hodges. In asking Glynn to
• osaid,
continue on t he council, Connor
"United States exports reached a record level in 1965. Nevertheless, we
mustseek to obtain a lar ger share of
world markets this year to achieve an
even more favorabl e balance of trade
and maintain the strength of the dollar."

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namese as elementary teachers. She arrived in Saigon July 4 for a t wo - year as s i gnment as an e ducational adv i ser in the
elementary training program. To acquaint

•

. • • GENE L. HOUSER is treasurer of
the Highland Rot a ry Club and a member
of the board of the Evangelical United
Church of Christ, Highland . He is also
a member of the Higher Education·and
Campus Ministry Committee of the Illino is South Conference of the Un ited
Church of Christ.

. • . An artic l e entitl ed "Project in
Job Seeking and Intervi ewing" by ELISE
PALMER and Mrs. JAMES PANCRAZIO (Sally)
appeared in The Balance Shee t, a business education periodical .
• • • CLARENCE E. VINCENT's article on
11
Pers onnel Executives Examine the Col lege Graduate" appeared in the March
issue of Collegiate News and Views.
The article was t he culmination of research conducted by Vinc ent among 27
personnel executives in t he St. Louis
metropolitan area and provides some
s i gnificant insi gh ts into th e attitudes
and opinions of t hese personnel executives
concerning the college graduates employed
by t he ir firms. Among other things, according to Vincent, these executives
we re quick to point out the weaknesses
of college gr aduates and the col l eges .

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EDUCATION DIVISION NEWS
BETTY JO KELLEY has joined the S IU contract team helping train South Viet -

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h er wit h the Vietnamese language , spe cfal Vietnamese tapes were ob tained from
Washington, D. C. Because of its langua ge lab or a tory facilities, SIU is one
of t he first educational institutions to
use these tapes.
SID's elementary teacher tr aining program and a vocational training program
have been in operation in Vietnam
since 1961. Because of the critical
need for more elementary teachers there,
the elementary educati on t eam was asked

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San Francisco i~ March to take part in
t he Ass ociation for Supervision and Curriculum Development meeting on t he t heme
"Strategy for Curr iculum Change." Boss
was chairman of a s tudy group, "Assessing Gains and Loss es in Change," and
Harmin was consultant to a gr oup on
"Repersonalization of Teaching."
• . • Taking part in t he First Annual
Elementary Physical Education h7orkshop
held April 30 at West Junior High School
Gym, Alton, were LARRY MOEHN, workshop
chairman; WALTER KLEIN, GEORGE LUEDKE,
W ILLI&amp;~ BRICK, GARY KESL, ROSEMARIE
ARCHANGEL and BABETTE BOWMAN served on
Moehn's committee. The welcome was
given by RICHARD SPEAR, chairman of
the faculty of health, physical education and recreation. Mrs. SARA
CARPENTER, physical education dance
specialist, was also on the program.
. • . WALTER KLEIN was in Springfield
April 30 and May 1 as a de legate for
the Madison County Heart Association
to the Illinois Heart Associat ion Convent ion. He received a Certificate
of Merit for his participation in activities of the Madison County chapter.
. . . ROBERT WALDON attended the 44th
annual meeting of the American College
Health Association in San Diego May 3-6.

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. . . GEORGE REUTER was a consultant
and contributor to "High Priority
Areas in School Personnel Adminis tration: Bridging the Gap Between Research and Practice" (Research and
Services Bulletin No. 19 available
from Arizona State University) and
"Planning and Utilization of a Regional Data Bank for Educational Research Purposes." Copies of the latter may be secured from Laboratory for
Research in Instruction, Graduate School
of Education, Harvard University . . . •
On March 1, the Honorable Melvin Price
asked that an address by Reuter entitled "Education for All Mankind" be
inserted in the Congressional Record.
The address was prepared for lay citi-

zens' leaders in education by Reuter, a
member of the Illinois Citizens Education Council and adviser to the National
Committee for the Support of the Public
Schools. He is author of ''International
Education Must Be an Integrated Goal in
American Life" which appeared in the
Congressional Record on May 10. His
testimony entitled "Four-Year Terms for
Congressmen Make Sense" appeared in the
recently printed "Hearings Before Committee on the Judiciary" of the U. S.
House of Representatives. Reuter was
elected to an unexpired term on the Board
of Deacons of the First Baptist Church of
Alton last spring. This is the fourth
church he has served in this capacity.
• . . On April 6 MANFORD SONSTEGARD appeared at the American Personnel and
Guidance Association Convention in !~Jash­
ington, D. C., to present a video tape
of the group counseling procedure f or
the elementary school children and the ir
parents and to discuss the principles and
the rationale for group counseling. The
follow·ing day he met with a group in Wil mington , Del. "This is a community group
who call themselves 'Associates for Study
and Action.'" His purpose in being there
was to discuss with them the elementary
school program which he helped develop
in t he Sandoval Public Schools a nd the
group counseling methods with elementary school children and parents which
he was influential in establishing in
the Quincy Public Schools. April 21-22
he Has at the Universitv of Missouri in
Columbia for a -.;..rorkshop in group counseling procedures for the Mizzou counseling and guidance staff.
J

• • . An ar ticle by ROBERT STEIM&lt;ELLNER,
"t,Jhat Am I?" was read May 10 by Rex
Davis on his KMOX radio program. "Let's
Spell it Out!" by Steinkellner was published in the April Illinois V .F .\.J.
News (on page 1). The News has a circulation of 95,000. He was master of
ceremonies at the Memorial Day services
in Collinsville. On May 25 he presented
Thespian and oratorical awards to the
Collinsville High School Speech Club.

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San Francisco i~ March to take part in
t he Ass ociation for Supervision and Curriculum Development meeting on t he t heme
"Strategy for Curr iculum Change." Boss
was chairman of a s tudy group, "Assessing Gains and Loss es in Change," and
Harmin was consultant to a gr oup on
"Repersonalization of Teaching."
• . • Taking part in t he First Annual
Elementary Physical Education h7orkshop
held April 30 at West Junior High School
Gym, Alton, were LARRY MOEHN, workshop
chairman; WALTER KLEIN, GEORGE LUEDKE,
W ILLI&amp;~ BRICK, GARY KESL, ROSEMARIE
ARCHANGEL and BABETTE BOWMAN served on
Moehn's committee. The welcome was
given by RICHARD SPEAR, chairman of
the faculty of health, physical education and recreation. Mrs. SARA
CARPENTER, physical education dance
specialist, was also on the program.
. • . WALTER KLEIN was in Springfield
April 30 and May 1 as a de legate for
the Madison County Heart Association
to the Illinois Heart Associat ion Convent ion. He received a Certificate
of Merit for his participation in activities of the Madison County chapter.
. . . ROBERT WALDON attended the 44th
annual meeting of the American College
Health Association in San Diego May 3-6.

•

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. . . GEORGE REUTER was a consultant
and contributor to "High Priority
Areas in School Personnel Adminis tration: Bridging the Gap Between Research and Practice" (Research and
Services Bulletin No. 19 available
from Arizona State University) and
"Planning and Utilization of a Regional Data Bank for Educational Research Purposes." Copies of the latter may be secured from Laboratory for
Research in Instruction, Graduate School
of Education, Harvard University . . . •
On March 1, the Honorable Melvin Price
asked that an address by Reuter entitled "Education for All Mankind" be
inserted in the Congressional Record.
The address was prepared for lay citi-

zens' leaders in education by Reuter, a
member of the Illinois Citizens Education Council and adviser to the National
Committee for the Support of the Public
Schools. He is author of ''International
Education Must Be an Integrated Goal in
American Life" which appeared in the
Congressional Record on May 10. His
testimony entitled "Four-Year Terms for
Congressmen Make Sense" appeared in the
recently printed "Hearings Before Committee on the Judiciary" of the U. S.
House of Representatives. Reuter was
elected to an unexpired term on the Board
of Deacons of the First Baptist Church of
Alton last spring. This is the fourth
church he has served in this capacity.
• . . On April 6 MANFORD SONSTEGARD appeared at the American Personnel and
Guidance Association Convention in !~Jash­
ington, D. C., to present a video tape
of the group counseling procedure f or
the elementary school children and the ir
parents and to discuss the principles and
the rationale for group counseling. The
follow·ing day he met with a group in Wil mington , Del. "This is a community group
who call themselves 'Associates for Study
and Action.'" His purpose in being there
was to discuss with them the elementary
school program which he helped develop
in t he Sandoval Public Schools a nd the
group counseling methods with elementary school children and parents which
he was influential in establishing in
the Quincy Public Schools. April 21-22
he Has at the Universitv of Missouri in
Columbia for a -.;..rorkshop in group counseling procedures for the Mizzou counseling and guidance staff.
J

• • . An ar ticle by ROBERT STEIM&lt;ELLNER,
"t,Jhat Am I?" was read May 10 by Rex
Davis on his KMOX radio program. "Let's
Spell it Out!" by Steinkellner was published in the April Illinois V .F .\.J.
News (on page 1). The News has a circulation of 95,000. He was master of
ceremonies at the Memorial Day services
in Collinsville. On May 25 he presented
Thespian and oratorical awards to the
Collinsville High School Speech Club.

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He presented citizenship and speech
awards to assemblies at North Junior
High School, Webster Junior High School
and S. S. Peter and Paul graduating
class in Collinsville, and the citizenship award at St. Stephens School in
Caseyville. May 3-7 he was in Dallas
for the International Reading Association Convention. Steinkellner's article, "The University Registrar," appeared in the February issue of the
Kappa Delta Pi Record.
FINE ARTS DIVISION NEWS
SIU faculty and students were well represented among the artists selected by
jury for the River Roads Exhibit 1 66
presented by the Northside Art Association at the River Roads Mall in St. Louis
County. Prizes and recognition were
awarded to t-JILLIAM FREUND for his painting, "Sunsweep"; to Herman Proffer, a
graduate student, for "Empty Watercolor
Pans on Canvas"; and to Maria Ann Meyers,
an art major, for her "Sculpture." Other
exhibitors from the University were DAVID
HUNTLEY and students William Justin Brown,
Phillip Murray, Gilbert Singleton and
Douglas Trautt. The exhibit ran from
April 24 through May 7.

•

• • • Freund lectured May 9 at the Northside Art Association on "The Development
of Modern Painting." A Freund watercolor,
"The Big Trick You Played on Me," was one
of eight paintings to represent the State
of Illinois artist in Watercolor U.S.A.,
the largest exhibition of its kind in
the world. The exhibition is sponsored
annually by the Springfield (Mo.) Art
Muse11m.
• • • JEROME BIRDMAN was an invited
guest at the Hiram College International
Conference on Latin American Theater
March 5-6. Guest of honor was Mexican
playwright Emilio Carballido; principal
speaker was Frank Dauster. The conference
explored recent trends in Latin American
playwriting. Another feature was the
English language premiere of "And They

Told Us We Were Immortal" by contemporary
Argentine playwright Osvaldo Dragun.
Birdman reported on developments in Brazil.

• • • On April 1 and 2 ROBERT HAWKINS
was in Boston to take part in this year's
Annual Conference of Area and Regional
Representatives of the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee. The committee
supports and supervises projects similar
to those -carried out by the Peace Corps
--hospitals, health and welfare centers,
libraries, schools, etc. The UUSC also
promotes domestic projects in urban slum
areas, as well as in several southern
communities.
• • • DAVID HUNTLEY had a one-man exhibition this summer at the Galeries
Raymond Duncan in Paris. Located on the
Rue de Seine, in the heart of the art
community, the gallery is one of the
largest and most visited on the Left
Bank. Mrs. Huntley (Mary Dene) accompanied him to Paris.
• • • On March 11 WILLIAM MAGERS per-

formed the "String Quintet in G Major,
Opuslll" by J. Brahms with the Illinois
String Quartet at Carbondale. On March 24
he performed Edwin Londen's "Sonatina"
for viola and piano at the Illinois Wesleyan Symposium of Contemporary Music.
• • • WARREN JOSEPH has received a re-

quest from the Educational Research Information Service of the U. s. Office
of Education for permission to include
his research in the area of adolescent
vocal growth among materials to be made
available to the newly-established Educational Research Information Centers
throughout the country. The U. s.
Office of Education identified his research as "one of the works determined
to be of great value in the field of
music education." In relation to this
area of vocal research, the second of
a series of detailed articles appeared
in the summer issue of the Journal of
Research in Music Education. The June
issue of the Music Educators Journal
featured an article by Joseph entitled

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"Group Determined Goals in Music" which
sets forth the philosophy and the practices involved in establishing a climate
in which students in both classes and
performing groups can be encouraged to
contribute to the decision-making process.
WILLIS STEVENS, who made his piano
debut in New York City's Town Hall two
years ago, made his second appearance
there last February 12. His
first performance had "interesting things to
,,
say," according
to a New York
Times critic.
His second appearance, according to the
New York paper,
"Stirred considerable excitement." A
performer must
be good to stir
excitement in
Wil lis Stevens
a New York
critic, so
S.tevens is justly proud of his review,
"tvhich also referred to his playing as
"capable pianism" and "stylistically
reputable." Stevens, who joined the
SIU staff last fall, has been heard
in numerous colleges throughout the
country and has also appeared on the
music series of several museums. Such
words as "intensity " "communication "
'
"rhythmic and emotional
drive," "each'
phrase with loving care" have been used
to describe these performances.
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of the arts under provisions of new
federal legislation, specifically Public
Laws 89-10 and 89-2. Miss Katherine Bloom,
national director for the arts and humanities, U. S. Office of Education, was
in attendance. Other program participants
were Charles Mark, national director of
state and community operations, National
Counsel of the Arts; George Irwin, chairman of the Illinois Arts Counsel and
national chairman of the Arts Counsel
of America, Inc.; and William Bealmer,
assistant superintendent, Division of
Instruction, Illinois State Office of
Public Instruction.

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. . . LLOYD BLAKELY, HARRY HILBERRY
and ANDREW KOCHMAN represented the
Edwardsville campus March 3-4 at a
special conference called "An Exploration for the Improvement and Support
of the Visual and Performing Arts in
Illinois" which was h e ld at the University of Illinois in Urbana. Pqr~
pose of the conference was to cla~~fy
what is happening in the encour?gement

. • . CATHERINE MILOVICH is recording
secretary of the Board of Craft Alliance,
St. Louis. She attended the Western
Arts Association Conference in Houston,
Tex., April 3-7. Two of her pieces of
stitchery, "Garden of the Gods" and
her newest piece, "Priestess," were on
exhibit at the conference, which drew
from a membership in 28 states. The
exhibition represented a selection of
work from the association membership and
was juried through slides.

HUMANITIES DIVISION NEWS

•

JAMES AUSTIN gave a lecture on American
literature at a seminar on the teaching
of English which was held in Rumania
July 11-30. The lecture was sponsored
by the U. S. State Department.
• • • "Heimito von Doderer's, Magnum
Opus Austriacum" written by PAUL
GUENTHER appeared in the winter issue
of Papers on Language and Literature .
: • • NICHOLAS JOOST is a member of
the Committee on Home Selections of
the Alton Branch of the American Field
Service. By invitation of Prof. Albrecht
Strauss of the Department of English at
the University of North Carolina, Joost
contributed a paper to a Festschrift
volume in honor of Dougald MacMillan,
who has just retired from his post as
Kenan Professor at the University.

�.......------------------------------------ 9 Joost's paper, "The Dial: A Journalistic
Emblem and Its Tradition," has been accepted as one of the papers to be published in the volume, which will be issued later in the year as a special number of Studies in Philology. Prof.
Joost 1 s review of The Georgian Revo"!t
(Carbondale, 1965) by Robert Ross will
appear in a forthcoming issue of Western
Humanities Review. His book, The Dial
in Transition, 1912-1920, has been accepted for publication by Barre Publishers, Barre, Mass. Last year Barre
won three awards for the quality of its
publications. Prof. Joost will serve
as vice president of the St. Louis
Westerners during 1966-67. Last year
he served as program chairman. As outgoing president of the Midcontinent
American Studies Association, Joost
gave the annual presidential address
at the MASA annual meeting held March 26
at the University of Missouri, Columbia.
The Joosts' daughter Mary Elizabeth has
been awarded a tuition scholarship to
Marymount school for girls in Florissant
for 1966-67.

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. . . Two poems by G. W. LINDEN have
been accepted by the poetry magazine
Scimitar and Song. The poems are entitled "To D W G" and "Gordon's Pome."
. . . NORMAN LIVERGOOD has signed a contract for the publication of his manuscript, Activity in Marx's Philosophy,
with N. V. Martinus Nijhoff's Boekhandel
en Uitgeversmaatschappij, The Hague,
The Netherlands.
. . • ALFRED PELLEGRINO is acting head
of the division during GERALD RUNKLE's
leave, April 1 to September 1, 1966.
. . . DAN ROMANI received a grant under
the Fulbright-Hays Act to attend a summer seminar in Italy for American teachers of Italian. This fall he will teach
a course in elementary Italian, "a noteworthy step in the expansion of the
modern foreign language program on
this campus."

•

• • • JOSEF RYBERG was appointed secretary of the German section of the Central
States Modern Language Teachers' Association at the annual convention held in
Detroit May 12-13. Ryberg presented a
paper, "The Purpose, Need, and Use of
Formal Grammar in the Teaching of German " at the convention.

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. • • RONALD GLOSSOP has been selected
for inclusion in the 1966 edition of
Outst'anding· Young Men of America. A
1955 honors
graduate of Carthage College,
his picture appeared in the
February-March
issue of the
Carthaginian,
official publication of the
Carthage College
Alumni Association. Studying
under a four-year
tuition scholarship, he was
named to Who's
Who in American
Ronald Glossop
Colleges and
Universities
during his senior year. Following
graduation he attended seminary for one
year prior to entering Washington University, where he received his Ph.D.
in 1960. At Washington U. he studied
under a graduate scholarship the first
year and a fellowship the remaining
three years. In 1960 he was named to
Phi Beta Kappa. After receiving his
doctorate he accepted a faculty appointment teaching philosophy at Boise Junior
College in Idaho and a year later accepted an assignment at Portland (Ore.)
State College. He came to SIU in 1965.
BRYCE VAN SYOC attended the Third
National Conference on Teaching English
to Speakers of Other Languages which
was held March 17-19 in New York. In
Chicago on May 8 he read a paper at the
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National Association of Foreign Student
Affairs on the subject, "A Comparison
of Selected Southeast Asian School Systems with Special Reference to English
Language Training." June 27-29 he was
a guest lecturer at a NDEA Institute
in Teaching English as a Foreign Language which was held at Teachers College, Columbia University. He lectured
for eight weeks at a similar institute
last summer.
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY DIVISION NEWS
ORVIU.E GOERING, GEORGE POYNOR and
KRISHNA SRIVASTAVA attended the national
meeting of the Society of Industrial and
Applied Mathematics which was held at
the University of Iowa May 11-13. • • •
CLELLIE OURSLER, ANDREW LINDSTRUM and
VERN MARLIN attended the Illinois Section of Mathematical Association of
America at St. Dominic's College, St.
Charles, May 13-14. The Edwardsville
c·ampus will be host to the Association
in 1968.
• • • Goering and his family are spending
the summer ·in Brunswick, Me., while he
is attending the Mathematical Association
of America's Cooperative Summer Seminar
at Bowdoin College. Goering received a
grant from the Sloan Foundation and the
National Science Foundation to study
analysis and applied mathematics at the
workshop, which began June 20 and ends
August 12.
• • • R. N, PENDERGRASS received a
$14 , 110 grant from the National Science
Foundation for an "In-Service Institute
in Mathematics for Secondary School
Teachers for 1966-67." This is the
second In-Service Institute at the
Edwardsville campus~ ln 1965-66 LYMAN
HOLDEN and Penderg;~ss taught courses
for both junior and s~nior high school
teachers of mathematics under a similar
grant. Holden rep~~$ented the campus
April 25-26 in New Qrleans at a rew
gional meeting pf ~h~ dtrectors of NSF
In-Service Institute$ for Teachera , These
annual meetings ellQw universitie• to

keep abreast of NSF policy and afford
an opportunity for exchange of ideas and
•
exper1ences.
• • • J. EDMUND WHITE was in Pittsburgh
last March 26-30 for the 15lst National
Meeting of the American Chemical Society.
He also met with the Curriculum Committee
of the Division of Chemical Education and
attended a symposium on problems in starting graduate programs in chemistry.
• •• DEBORAH TEPPER RAIMO's paper entitled "L2 Expansions in Terms of Generalized Heat Polynomials and of Their
Appell Transforms" appeared in the
Pacific Journal of Mathematics. Her
paper, "Series Expansions of Generalized
Temperature Functions in N Dimensions,"
has been accepted for publication by
the Canadian Journal of Mathematics.
J. Blackman of Syracuse University reviewed her "Functions With the Huygens
Property" in Mathematical Reviews.
Mrs. Raimo, who has been appointed
book reviewer for the American Mathematical Monthly, reviewed the following papers for Zentralblatt fllr Mathematik: "Solutions to a Class of Complete Heat Flow Equations" by I. M.
Winer; "Non-Linear Heat Generation and
Stability of the Temperature Distribu- ,
tion in Conducting Solids" by D. D.
Joseph, and "Transient Heat Conduction
Between a Sphere and a Surrounding
Medium of Different Thermal Properties"
by J. R. Philip. Mrs. Raimo was in
Moscow August 16-26 where she gave a
paper entitled "Series Expansions of
Generalized Temperature Function" at
the International Congress of Mathematics. She also spent part of August
in Israel where she was invited to lecture before the International Congress
on current research at the Mathematical
Colloquium of the Israel Institute of
Technology in Haifa. Last March 24-26
she was a visiting lecturer at Vincennes
(Ind.) University under sponsorship of
the Mathematical Association of America
supported by the National Science Foundation. Her lecture was entitled "Inequalities."

I

�- 11 SOCIAL SCIENCES DIVISION NEt;JS
MICHAEL ASTOUR has prepared for print,
edited and provided with a preface and
notes the manuscript of Dr. I s rael
Zinberg, History of Jewish Lit erat ure,
Vol. IX. Zinberg was arrested during
the Stalinist purge in 1938 and died
in prison a year later, and t l1e manuscript of t h e last volume of his classical work was considered lost. The
Brandeis University library staff,
with Astour's help, was able to trace
the whereabouts of Zinberg's archives
and to obtain the microfilm of the lost
manuscript. It was published in March
as a joint publication of Brandeis and
CYCO Publishing House, New York City.
. • • KURT GLASER and David S. Collier,
director of the Foundation for Foreign
Affairs, collaborated in editing Western
Policy and Eastern Europe, published
last spring by the Henry Regnery Company
of Chicago. The t h ird volume in a series,
the book contains 12 essays by American
and European scholars originally presented at an international conference
he ld in Chicago in March, 1965. Glaser
contributed the concluding chapter,
entitled "Toward a Strategy of Freedom."
Glaser's review of Fabian von Schlabrendorff's The Secret War Against Hitler
(New York, 1965) was published in the
spring issue of the Ukrainian Quarterly.
Another review, dealing \vitL Donald
Brandon's American Foreign Policy:
Beyond Utopianism and Realism, appeared
in the summer issue of Modern Age. On
May 19, Glaser gave a lecture to an
audience of 300 in Chicago which dealt
with "The War Guilt Question and American
Foreign Policy." Given in German, the
l ec ture was given under the auspices of
the North Side (Chicago) chapter of t he
German-American National Congress.

and provides a stipend to enable faculty
members to carry out the aims of the
program. The appointment is for two years.
• • • DCROTHY GORE was elected president of the Central Section of the National Association of Geology Teachers
at their annual meeting held March 12
at the University of Missouri, Columbia.
She served as
secretary-treasurer from 1953
to 1961, as vice
president during
1965-66, and was
national secretary from 1961
to 1964. Next
year's meeting
of the Central
Section will be
he ld on the
Edwardsville
campus. The
section includes members
Dorothy Gore
from Minnesota,
Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri and is
one of 11 regional sections. Membership is open to all engaged or interested in earth science education.
On February 14 ELLIOTT RUD'(..JICK .
served as commentator in a session oh
"The American Negro" sponsored by the
SIU history department at Carbondale.
His article, "Fifty Years of Race Relations in East St. Louis: The Breaking
Down of White Supremacy," was published
in Midcontinent American Studies Journal,
Vol. 6. "Black Man in the Wh.i te City:
Negroes and the Columbia Expo~ition"
by Rudwick appeared in Phylon, ·vol. 26.
•

•

•

NEWS FROM STATE AND NATIONAL SERVICES
• • . In April SAMUEL PEARSON and his
wife Mary were appointed Danforth Associates for this campus. The Danforth
Associate Program is designed to heighten
the quality of faculty-student relations

•

•

DAVID VAN HORN and MAX HANSEL , Placement Services, attended the spring
meeting of t he Midwest College Placement Association held in Madison, Wis .,

�- 12 minis trati on and the social sciences
from both public and priva.te institutions of higher learning .

May 3-6. Van Horn is co- chairman of
the Registration Committee for the fall
meeting, to be held in St . Louis i n
September . Van Horn became a grandfather March 23 when his daughter Cora,
Mrs . Alan Sheppard, delivered a son,
James Alan . Hansel spoke on "Honors
and Maturity" May 23 at the National
Honor Society induction ceremonies
at Carroll t on High School . He gave
the same talk April 18 to the students and parents of Bethalto High
School when 19 new members were inducted into the National Honor Society .
• . . An essay by SEYMOUR MANN, Public
Administration and Metropolitan Affairs,
entitled "Across the Wide Mississippi"
appears in Cases in American National
Government and Politics published by
Prentice-Hall, Inc. Edited by Tre sso lini
and Frost, Mann ' s piece is an original
case study pr epared especially for the
book, as are the 27 other contributions
by authors from across t he nation.
" Across the l.Vide Mississippi" is a commentary il lustrating t he dynamics of
federalism in contemporary times .
Specifically, it traces the influence
of the amendments to the Highway Act
of 1962 requiring continuous and comprehensive transportation planning in
metropolitan areas. The impact on
inter - governmental relations is traced
in the St . Louis met r opolitan area
prior to the actual establishment of
the East-West Gateway Coordinating
Committee.
. . • Seymour Mann is co-chairman of
the University-State Agency Council
organized a few months ago t o provide
a means of pooling the re sources of
Illinois colleges and universities and
the oper ating agencies in a concerted
effor t to attr act college -trained in dividuals to careers in State service .
The Council was formed at th e request
of Governor Otto Kerner, who appointed
as members top level repr esentativ es
from each State agency, and placement
officers and pr ofessor s in public ad -

\

0

_,.--

Executive Committee of the University State Agency Council confers on plans
for program. Seated, Mrs . Miriam Ringo,
assis t ant to Gov. Kerner, council cochairman; Mi ss Maude Myers, state per •
sonnel director . Standing, SEYMOUR
MANN, council co-chairman ; James
Banovetz, Northern Illinois University ,
who i s chairman of the recruitment
committee; and George Watson, Roosevelt
Universi t y , chairman of t he training
committee. Dr. Mortimer Brown , assist ant to the director of the Department
of Mental Hea lth (not shown), is chairman of the r esearch committee .
• The Public Adminis tr a tion a nd
Metropolitan Affairs Program has a
contractual relati onship with the city
of Eas t St. Louis whereby the Program
provides the city advisory and consultative services on planning and
development problems and po licies.
Various staff members work on the
pr oject but ROBERT MENDELSON is devoting most of his time to this ac tivity. Mende l son joined the staff
•

•

�- 13 February 1 . A graduate of Washington
University, he holds an advanced degree
in urban planning from the Univer sity
of Illinois. He was active in the real
esta t e business in the St . Louis area
for 12 years, but gave up this job to
accept an Andrew Mellon Fellowship for
study in the field of urb an planning .
Mende lson is married and has two children--a boy three and a girl, five .
H~ and his family live at 7355 Stanford,
University City, Mo .

NE~vS

FROM STUDENT SERV ICES

Last February 28, PHILIP ECKERT spoke
to the Madison County School Counselors
about the methods of financing a college
education. He a l so discussed the new
Federal Work - Study Program and the Federal Opportunity Grants . Eckert is co author of two articles appearing in the
Mid - Wes t ern , a publication of the Mid west Association of University Student
Emp loyment Directors .
One article,
written in collaboration with Wi lli am
T . French, is entitled "A Report on
the Federal Work-Study Program at
Southern Illinois University"; the
second article was written with
RAYMOND DEJARNETT of the Education
Division and is entitled "Excerpts
from the Meeting of Midwest Associa tion of Student Financial Aid Adminis tration ." Both articles appeared in
the winter edition of 1966. Eckert
has be en visiting a rea high schools ,
discussing with prospective college
students methods of financing their
education.

will be appreciated: 1) Submitting to
the group information regarding faculty
or staff leaving eith e r permanently , or
on leave, so they may be contacted for
possible listing; 2) submitting infor mation r egarding incoming staff or faculty who might need help in locating
housing; 3) notification to incoming
staff or faculty of the group's services .
Those who should be contacted are: the
Mesdames JOHN KENDALL, 656-0531; ARTHUR
GRIST;· ·6s6·~8 ·~i65 ; JOHN McCALL, 656-6122;
JOSEPH PIVAL, 656-1493; JOHN RICHARDSON,
656-2458; ROBERT ENGBRETSON, 656 - 3257
and DAV ID HOFMAN, 656 - 8327 .
NEWS FROM THE COUNSELING
AND TESTING CENTER
The Counseling and Testing Center at
the Edwardsville campus h as been ap proved as a controlled testing center
for the Mil l e r Analogies Test. In
making the announcement for release
to area newspapers, MARY JANE LOPER,
assis t ant coord inator, said results
of the MAT are in widespread use for
the selection of graduate students in
Universities and of high-level per sonnel in business and government.
"It is a difficult test," she said ,
"and one of t wo major tests for
graduate students, the other being
the Graduate Record Examination ."
• • • BERNARD O'BRIEN was in Washington
the week of April 4 where he participated in a symposium entitled "Innovations in Counseling--1966" a t the
meetings of the American Personnel and
Guidance Association .

WOMEN ' S CLUB NEWS
NEWS FROM TECHNICAL
The SIU Women ' s Club has organized a
group for the purpose of helping new
faculty and staff find housing in and
around Edwardsville. At pr es en t, this
group is seeking listings of houses
which the owners would be willing to
sell or rent to anyone, r egardless
of rac e or color. Cooperation of SIU
fa culty and staff in the fol lowing ways

•

AND ADULT EDUCATION

An Advanced Development Program for Middle
Management to develop management skills
through case study was conducted at the
Edwardsville Ho l iday Inn from April 15
to June 17. The program was designed
only for those who had completed SID's
Development Program for Middle Manage ment . PAUL SKJERSETH served as in-

•
•

�- 14 structor; HAROLD CUTRIGHT and JOE SMALL
served as consulting faculty. Administrative members included E. REBER
CASSTEVENS, supervisor of Technical and
Adult Education; DAI.E BLOUNT, assistant
supervisor; JOHN GLYNN, head of the
Business Division; and RALSTON SCOTT,
chairman of SIU's faculty of business
administration.
NEWS FROM THE REGISTRAR'S OFFICE
JOHN SCHNABEL was in Chicago March 14-16
for the Association for Higher Education
meetings. March 28-30 he attended the
North Central Association meetings in
Chicago.
NEW TRAVEL REGULATIONS AVAILABLE
New travel regulations released July 1
may be secured by contacting the Disbursements Office at Edwardsville.
EDWARDSVILLE CAMPUS TO HAVE EIGHT
NEW DEANS AND THREE NEW ASSISTANT DEANS
SIU's Edwardsville campus will begin its
fall quarter with eight new deans and
three new assistant deans.
S. D. LOVELL, who has been serving as
executive officer of the University's
General Studies Division, will serve as
dean of this division. Deans of the
other six divisions are KENNETH MYERS,
Business; H. DENE SOUTHWOOD, Education;
ANDREW KOCHMAN, Fine Arts ; GERALD RUNKLE,
Humanities; KERMIT CLEMANS, Science and
Technology; and ROBERT CAMPBELL, Social
Sciences.
The eighth dean is THOMAS HANSMEIER, who
was approved at the June meeting of the
SIU Board of Trustees as dean of students at the Edwardsville campus.
Hansmeier came to the University in the
fall of 1965 as associate professor in
the education Division and as assistant
to Jack Graham, University-wide dean of
students.

Only Myers is new to the University.
He joined the staff August 1 to head
the Business Division, replacing JOHN
GLYNN, who will devote his time to fulltime teaching in the division. Myers
received his A.B. and M.B.A. degrees
from Harvard University and his Ph.D.
from Northwestern University. A member
of the Northwestern staff since 1950,
he began as a lecturer, advanced to full
professor and then to chairman of the
Department of Operations management and
Industrial Relations. He is married and
has two sons and one daughter. As of
September 1, Myers and his family will
live in Alton at 410 East 12th Street.
Named assistant deans were CLELLIE
OURSLER, THOMAS EVANS and E. R.
CASSTEVENS. Oursler will serve as assistant dean of the General Studies
Division; he has been executive assistant for the prog~am. Evans' title was
changed from assistant director of Student Affairs to assistant dean. Former
supervisor of the Technical and Adult
Education program on this campus,
Casstevens is now assistant dean of
that program.
•

Other title changes approved at the
August board meeting were those of
JOHN ABBOTT, from head of the Lovejoy
Library to director; WARREN BROWN,
from assistant registrar to assistant
director of admissions; ROBERT BRUKER,
from division chief to assistant registrar; WILLIAM BURCKY, from supervisor to coordinator of student housing;
RAYMOND GENE COBBEL from director of the
physical plant to architect and physical
plant director; EDWARD DANIEL, from as~istant to the controller to assistant
treasurer, Edwardsville campus, WILLIAM
CONNELL, from division chief to University purchasing officer (Universitywide); PHILIP ECKERT, from assistant
director to assistant program director;
GEORGE EVANOFF, from director, Personnel Office, to Civil Service personnel
director.
Other title changes include those of
WALTER HANSEL, from supervisor to place-

�- 15 -

ment s consultant; JAMES HOLCOMB , f r om
division chief in the Re gis trar's Office
to a cademic adviser in the General Studies Progr am; NORMAN JOHNSEN, from special
assistant and field representative to
coordinator of University relat.ions and
exhibits; PAUL KUNKEL, from special assistant in Business Affairs to assistant
to the vice president, Business Affairs,
and to continue as assistant director
of institutional research and as·s istant
professor in the Education Division;
Mrs . MARY JANE LOPER, to serve as assistant t o the director of the Counseling
and Testing Center rather than assistant
coordinator; SEYMOUR MANN, director of
the Public Administration and Metropolitan Affairs Center; WARREN STOOKEY,
assis tant to t he alumni director rather
than field representative; DORRIS WILTON
to serve as assistant to the registrar
rather than as division chief.
CHANGES IN RANK

On July 14 the board members fl ew to
Carbondale where t hey and the Carbon dale board members were gues ts of MRS.
D. W. MORRIS for lunch .
•

SIU BEGINS YEAR-LONG DEDICATION
(continued from page 1)
world . prob.lems. • • • It is my hope
and prayer ..that all t hat have a part
in this university wi ll join in a
rich and intimate ·relationship. • • •
Th is can be a significant metropolitan
area; it is on its way, . but it has a
l ong way to go ." President Morris
extended an invitation to all those
.
.
present to he lp SID make this possible .
He asked that all "work for the common
good of ·the Stat~ of Illinois."
.

The formal dedication began at 10 a.m.
with music by t he SIU Symphonic Band,
under the -direction of DALE FJERSTAD,
and the SIU Concert Chorale , under the
baton of LEONARD VAN CAMP. Following
posting of the colors by the AFROTC
at Edwardsville and the Granite City
Army Depot and the invocation, Kenneth
L. Davis, chairman of SIU's Board of
Trustees, introduced distinguished
gues t s .
•

At its April meeting in Chicago, the
SIU board approved the following promotions for the Edwardsville campus: Associat e professor to professor -- PAUL
.
GUENTHER and PATRICK RIDDLEBERGER; assistant professor to associate professor- JOHN ADES, DONALD BEDEL, . CATHERINE MILOVICH
and ROBERT RUTLEDGE .

In the . absence of Governor Otto Kerner,
who ·was ill, Vice President John
Rendleman read the dedicatory address . ..

SID WOMEN'S CLUB ELECTS NEW OFFICERS
At its May meeting , the Southern Illinois
University Women's Club, Edwardsville
campus, installed the following officers
for 1966 - 67: MRS. GORDON WOOD, president;
MRS. JOHN RANDALL, vice president; MRS .
PAUL TARPEY, secretary; MRS. RALSTON SCOTT,
treasurer; MRS . CLELLIE OURSLER and MRS .
DANIEL BOSSE, directors .

•

•

.

.

•

Committee chairmen include MRS . JAMES
HOLCOMB and MRS. W. B. VAN SYOC , haspitality; MR~ . JAMES COMER and MRS .
MARION KUMMLER, interest groups; MRS.
WILLIAM TUDOR and MRS . GENE TROTTER,
membe r ship ; MRS . ROBERT HANDY, program;
and MRS . HARRY KIRCHER and MRS • BERTRON
BRAUN, publicity .

A barbecue-fish fry and campus tours,
the students' annual spring festival
and an architectural arts program
rounded out the day's events . On
Saturday there was a seminar, "A
Community in Crisis: Tristan da
Cunha," sponsored by the Social
Sciences Division. The speaker was
Prof. Peter Munch from the Carbondale
campus.
Also included on the Saturday agenda
was a Humanities seminar, featuring
as speaker Andrew Schiller, professor
of English at the University of Illinois' Chicago Circle campus, who discussed the function of a commuter
campus. Following his discussion,

'

�- 16 a panel of faculty members from the
Humanities Division talked about the role
of the humanities in a practical world.
Participating were GERALD RUNKLE, moderator, ALFRED PELLEGRINO, WI LLIAN LINDEN
and JOHN ADES. On the committee which
prepared the program were also GORDON
WOOD and ROBERT DUNCAN.
A series of plays, recit a l s , workshops,
colloquiums , art exhibits and other
cultural events are planned during t he
coming year to ce l ebrate the year-long
dedication program.
NEWS FROM THE SMALL BUSINESS INSTITUTE
Th e Office of t he Small Bus iness Institute
is now loc ated in Room 2402, General Classroom Building , Extension 2750.
Mrs . Norma J. Davis, who was a secretary
in the Vice Presidents' Off ice, has been
transferred to t he I nstitute i n a comparable position.
The Institut e is pr esently involved in
developing a complete educational program
in insurance which encompasses both academic credit courses and non -cr ed it courses .
The program is being developed in conjunction with the Illino is Associat ion of Life
Companies , the Business Div i s ion, and t he
Small Business Institute. The I.A.L.C.
has passed a r esolution indicating its
willingness to support the program both
financially and logistically. PATRICK
WILLIAMS, assistant director, went to
Hart ford, Connecticut , Apri l 3-8, to examine educational programs in insurance
developed by Connect icut Gener a l Life
Insurance Company and t he University of
Connecticut.
A Smal l Business Institute Faculty Advisory Council was appoint ed to provide
direction and estab lish polic i es pertinent to meetin g t he various needs of t he
bus iness community . The member s are:
E . R. CASSTEVENS, HARLIN HEATH , GENE
HOUSER, EDWARD RUHLMAN, ROBERT SCHUCHARDT,
and C. E. VINCENT.

The first offering on campus by t he
Institute was t h e First Annua l Seminar for Office Supervisors, April 27-28.
This seminar exp lored pr ob lem areas of
supervision and provided exposure to
the fields of creative thinking, human
relations, and motivation of workers.
It was co-sponsored by Bus iness Education
faculty, Technical and Adult Education, Division of University Extension, and the Institut e .
The Small Business Institute has
provided services to several individual businessmen in Granite City,
East St. Louis, St. Louis, Alton, and
Edwardsville on specialized problems.
Services were provided by t he Institute
and faculty members in the Business Di•

•

V1S10n.

The Institute is presently developing
programs for Quincy, Jacksonville,
Granite City, and Collinsville.
Williams spoke
Rotary meeting
Small Business
and Failure in

at t he Gr ani te City
February 15, on "The
Institut e a nd Success
Small Business."
•

•

�~

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITV/ED\NARDSVILLE, ILLINOIS

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INFORMATION SERVICE

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