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'

NOVEMBER

DECEMBER

1965

�N E WS
----

BULLETIN
-

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY - EDVJARDSVILLE
November-December, 1965
Vol. IX, No. 2

I

Mildred Arnold, Editor
Information Service, Station 3600
Edwardsville, Illinois

MATTHEWS NAMED TO HEAD CRIME CENTER
CHARLES MATTHEWS, head of the Delinquency
Study Project since coming to SIU in 1962,
has been named director of the University's Center for the Study of Crime, Delinquency and Corrections. Matthews has
been assistant
director of the
Center for the
past year and
fills the post
formerly held
by Myrl Alexander, who left
the University
a year ago to
become director
of the Federal
Bureau of Prisons but continues as an adjunct professor.
Matthews, who
received his
Charles Matthews
master's degree from the
University of Chicago, came to SIU from
an assignment with that university in
connection with the Quincy Youth Project.
His new post was announced November 12
following a meeting of the SIU board of
trustees. He will continue to maintain
his office in Edwardsville.

I

OTHER NEW APPOINTMENTS
In other action at the November 12 meeting
of the SIU board, LUTHER STATLER was confirmed as coordinator in the General Office at East St. Louis. A University of
Missouri graduate, Statler has been employed by Vickers Electric Company, St.

Louis, and Shell Oil Company, Wood River.
MORRIS CARR, who held the East St. Louis
post, is now coordinator at the General
Office in Alton.
In other changes affecting Edwardsville
campus personnel, KEITH MOYER was named
assistant dean in the Student Affairs
Division, and WILLIAM BURCKY, Moyer's
assistant when he was coordinator of
housing, has been named to that position. Burcky, will be assisted by a
new appointee, GRADY WILLIAMS, who
holds a master's degree from SIU.
MYRON BISHOP, associate professor in
the Science and Technology Division,
will also serve as acting coordinator
at Edwardsville of the University's
International Services Division. This
division, which administers SIU programs abroad and serves foreign students attending the University, is
heade~ by Dean Robert Jacobs.
PATRICK WILLIAMS, former city planner
for Independence, Missouri, has been
appointed assistant director of SID's
Small Business Institute and will be
located at Edwardsville. Like the
parent office at Carbondale, directed
by Ralph Bedwell, the institute at
Edwardsville will offer consulting
service to area small businessmen,
conduct special short courses and
workshops in small business management, and coordinate study sequences
for undergraduates aimed at backgrounding them for careers in small
business. Williams, who will also
be an assistant professor in the
Business Division, received his
bachelor's and master's degrees
from Ohio State University.

�- 2 -

CLARENCE COLLIER, new assistant registrar at the Edwardsville campus, will
be in charge of all student registration,
according to rre gistrar JOHN SCHNABEL.
Collier was director of data processing
at the University of Tennessee, and
formerly headed the Vocational Guidance
Center on that campus. He attended Alabama State College and has done graduate
work at Peabody College, the University
of Alabama, Columbia Teachers College,
and the University of Georgia's Atlanta
Center. A lieutenant colonel in the
Army reserves, during Horld VJar II he
taught mathematics to cadets at West
Point.

SPECIAL ASSISTANT FOR
STUDENT AND AREA SERVICES
ARTHUR GP-IST,
special assistant to RALPH
RUFFNER, vice
president for
Student and Area
Services, joined
the S IU staff in
September, 1961,
as a consultant
for Community
Development
Services and
is continuinG
his work for CDS
as a field representative.
Born in Tampa,
Florida, Grist
Arthur Grist
received his
bachelor's degree in food technolo gy from Ohio State
University, and earned the master of public health degree from the University of
MichiGan. In his new assignment at SIU,
he replaces HOVJARD DAVIS, v1ho asked to
be relieved of administrative duties in
order to return to full-time teaching in
the Education Division. Grist is a reserve officer (captain) in the U. S. Air
Force. He and Mrs. Grist have two children,
Michele, four, and Arthur, Jr., three. They
live in Edwardsville at 647 Notre Dame.

JOHN GLYNN ELECTED VICE CHAIRMAN
OF NEVI FACULTY COUNCIL
JOHN GLYNN, head of the Business Division
was elected vice chairman of the new Faculty Council on November 2. Robert Layer
of Carbondale was elected chairman and
Roland Keene, also of Carbondale, secretary. Other Ed\vardsville members of the
new Faculty Council are JOHN ADES, three
years; ROBERT ERICKSON, one year; ORVILLE
GOERING, one year; LLOYD BLAKELY, tvlO
years; DANIEL SOPER, three years; and
ROBERT STEINKELLNER, three years. JACK
BRUCE THOMAS, assistant dean of academic
affairs, is an ex officio member. Ades
was elected to re.pr~s ·e ·n·t this campus on
the University Council for one year .
. Professor Glynn was married November 27 to Mrs. Angela H. Diestelkamp of
Richmond Heights, Mo. The ceremony was
held at the Little Flower Church in Richmond Heights. Until recently, the bride
had been a nurse at St. John's Mercy Hospital. Following a honeymoon in Jamaica,
the Glynns moved into their home in Alton
at 1403 Liberty.
STUDENTS FROM 69 ILLINOIS COUNTIES.
Students from 69 of Illinois' 102
counties are currently enrolled at
the Edwardsville campus, according
to registrar JOHN SCHNABEL. Of the
combined total of 7,148 attending the
three centers, 6,207 are from Illinois,
930 from 24 other states, and ll are
from 10 foreign countries. Missouri
leads the list of out-of-state students
VJith 889, most of v1hom commute from the
St. Louis area. Madison and St. Clair
counties account for 3,334 and 1,948
respectively. There are 234 students
from Macoupin County, 98 from Jersey,
5G from Bond, 65 from Clinton, and 62
from Greene. Cook County has 48, with
25 of them coming from Chicago. Students from California number six, and
Florida is represented with three.
There are two students from Greece,
and one each from Canada, British
Guiana, China, Hungary, Jordan,
Lebanon, Pakistan, Peru, and Africa.
Including 17,356 students on the Carbondale campus, total enrollment at SIU

�- 3 -

this year rose to 24,504, an increase of
19.3 per cent over last year.
THREE ATTEND
GENERAL STUDIES MEETING
S. D. LOVELL, C. C. OURSLER, and ROBERT
DUNCAN attended a meeting of the Association for General and Liberal Studies
at Des Moines October 28-30. Lovell
served on a "News and Views" panel, on
which he discussed the political economy
sequence of courses in the SIU General
Studies Program.
AAUP ELECTS NE'\&lt;7 OFFICERS
The Edwardsville branch of the American
Association of University Professors
elected its
1965-66 officers
November 29. Serving as president
will be ERNEST
SCHUSKY, head of
the behavioral
sciences faculty.
GEORGE MACE, also
a member of the
Social Sciences
Division, is the
new vice president; and JUSTIN
FROST, Science
and Technology
Division, is
Ernest Schusky
secretary-treasurer. LEONARD
HHEAT, Education Division, and HALTER
BLACKLEDGE, Business Division professor
and 1 2tiring president, are members of the
executive board.
IVAN CLIFF DIES
IVAN S. CLIFF, SR., died November 10 at
Barnes Hospital in St. Louis from a stroke.
He had been hospitalized for a month. Prof.
Cliff moved to the St. Louis area in 1943,
when he was named senior technologist in

plant operations at Shell Oil Company's
Wood River plant. He was later put in
charge of the plant's technical personnel recruitment and development program.
Upon retirement from Shell in 1961, he
joined the SIU faculty as assistant
professor of chemistry. A graduate of
Carleton College, he received his doctorate in organic chemistry from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He
was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and
Alpha Chi Sigma scholastic honoraries
and the American Chemistry Society.
Survivors include his wife; a daughter,
Dr. May Carpenter of Philadelphia; and
two sons, Dr. Ivan .S ...,.Cliff, Jr., an
intern at Barnes Hospital, and Thomas,
a pre-medical student at Washington
University. Funeral services for Mr.
Cliff were held November 13 at Edwardsville. Burial was in Lake City, Minnesota, his native state.
EDWARDSVILLE CAMPUS MEMBER OF GREATER
ST. LOUIS ARTS AND EDUCATION COUNCIL
SIU's Edwardsville campus is now an
associate member of the Greater St.
Louis Arts and Education Council, and
ANDREW KOCHMAN, chairman of the Fine
Arts Division, is the delegate to its
General Assembly. Other fine arts
faculty who have been appointed to
serve on panels are Mrs. CATHERINE
MILOVICH, visual arts panel; EDWIN
WARREN, music; and LYi ~N KLUTH,
theater. The Greater St. Louis Arts
and Education Council was organized
to "coordinate, promote, and assist
in the development of cultural and
educational activities in the Greater
St. Louis , area through cooperative
efforts of conscientious citizens
acting in council. 11 The Council
publishes a monthly calendar and
raises funds for the support of
ten agencies, among which are the
St. Louis Symphony, the KETC educational television station, Shaw's
Garden, and the Museum of Science
and Natural History. Eligible for
regular membership is 11 any non prof-

�it or ganization which i s autonomous and
is executinG and has operated a non restrictive, effective and re gular program
in the Greater St. Loui s area for the
promotion of one or more reco gnized cultural activities." Eli g ible for associate
member s hip is an organization ''which does
not qualify for it s reg ular membership
but which ha s a n active cultural pro gr a m
as part of it s re co gni ze d purpose or
activity."
REPRESENTS S IU AT 600TH ANN IVERSARY

STANLEY KI HBALL (l ef t) , Social Sciences
Division professor , represented S IU at
the 600th anniversar y of the Univer s ity
of Vienna while he was on leave last yea r
conducting research abroad. He was g iven
two bronze commemorative meda ls and a copy
of the special commemorative program (in
both English and German) to be pre sen ted
by him on behalf of the Rector to Pr es iden t DELYTE \'! , HORR I S and Vice President
IWBERT HacVICA!l (right).
HO\vARD DAVIS DOES STUDY OF
HASTER'S DEGREE GRADUATES
HO\·IARD DAVIS , pr ofessor of ed ucation, has
complete d a study on mas t er' s degree graduates from th e Edwardsville campus. The
first study in wha t is planned to be an
annual s ur vey of the mas ter' s de gree gradua te s was des i ~ ned t o aid in eva luati on of
the t r a inin:; pr ogr am for th e mas ter' s de gre e " by at t empt i ng to l earn vJhat former

graduates think of the program as they
experienced it." Former students appraised the program in terms of its .
effectiveness in preparing them for
the experiences they have had in the
field.
Questionnaires were sent to 378 persons
and 315 responded. In summarizing his
study, Davis listed nine points revealed by the study: 1) The number
of male graduates exceeded the number
of females by a ratio of 2 to 1;
2) the greatest number of graduates
came from Illinois and remained to
work as public ~cnoQl . educators in
Illinois; 3) the typical graduate
was 33 years of age, married to a
spouse who had taken additional educational \vork beyond hi gh school, was
employed full-time with a yearly income of approximately $8,000, which
had been increased as a result of his
being awarded a master's degree;
Lf) the greatest number of master's
de grees VJere a'\varded v7ith majors in
guidance, educational administration
and supervision, secondary education,
and elementary education; 5) the
master's de gree appeared to be a terminal de gree for the ma jority of res pondents; 6) the t y pical graduate
waited four years before starting
his graduate work, but there was some
evidence that this time was being
shortened; 7) respondents tended to
remain v1ith their prior employment
and were sati s fied with it; 8) graduates were plea s ed VJ ith all asp e cts
of their graduate pro gram, would
again choose to attend the Edv7ardsville campus, and '\.JOuld recommend it
to their friends and acquaintances;
9) graduate s primarily chose the
Edwardsville campus because it was
near their homes and because of low
tuition and fees.
RANDALLS' DAUGHTER NAl1ED QUEEN
Darcy Ra ndall, daughter of S IU's
associate architect, JOHN RANDALL,
and Hrs. Ilandall, has been elected

�- 5 -

Queen of the Savitar, the University of
Missouri yearbook. Announcement was made
November 15 at Homecoming . Miss Randall
has also been selected to reign durin G the
Sugar Bowl game between the University of
Missouri and the University of Florida,
to be held New Year's day at New Orleans.
A sophomore journalism major at Mizzou,
she attended Stephens College last year.
UNIVERSITY ACQUIRES
RODIN 1 S HALKING MAN

The most significant sculptor of his
time, the French sculptor had a strong
influence on sculpture in the early
20th century.
BUSINESS DIVISION Nm /S
Illinois has been a pivotal state in
winning more equitable property tax
assessment for railroads, LEO COHEN
told the annual conference of the National Tax Association meetin~ in New
Orleans early in November.
Cohen said it is apparent that dthe
monumental achievements in Illinois
are affecting the situation in other
states, although complete victory is
far from won in many states, especially Arkansas, West Virginia and
Hyoming." He cited a number of Illinois Supreme Court cases decided in
favor of railroads which had claimed
excessive or discriminatroy assessments.
In most cases, the courts have held
that railroad property was overvalued
by the assessors, or that rates on
railroad operating property were not
equalized with local property rntes.

In the skylighted three-story well in the
Elijah P. Lovejoy Memorial Library stands
Rodin's "The Ha. lking Han." Francois
Augucte Rene Rodin uas born in Paris in
November of 1840 and lived until the same
month in 1917. His early training was received at the Petite- Ecole du Dessin and
the Gobelius school. Rodin's long, controversial career be z an in 1864 with the
Salon's rejection of his sculpture, "Han
with a Broken Nose. 11 In 187 5 he went to
Italy, where Hichelang elo's tortured, unfinished shapes emer 3 ing from rough marble
blocks affected Rodin' s own style. Hith
the acceptance of his "Age of Bronze" in
1877, Rodin's work be gan to be recognized
and preserved in the Rodin Museum in Paris.

''Hhere markets are reasonably perfect,
such as the securities market, pricing
or valuation is a simple procedure of
using market quotations," Cohen stated
in his paper. 11 hany difficult problems arise in valuating certain types
of properties, such as major industrial
concerns and public utilities, which
rarely exchange in the market.
"The valuation of all types of property is a very technical business which
requires well-qualified, honest personnel," he said. "This is also crucial when one recognizes the dependence
the c our ts place on the role of the assessors, including the so-called judg ment factor . . . . And especially is
this important in ascertaining values,
where mathematical certainty is not possible, but competency is of the essence."

�- 6 -

. . . At the fall conference of the Illinois Business Education Association held
in Springfield November 4-5 a research
bulletin edited by MARY M. BRADY was distributed. Contributors to the bulletin,
containing analyses and abstracts of recent research in the area of business
education, included Miss Brady and ELISE
PALMER. Miss Brady is chairman of the
Publications Committee for the IBEA. At
the conference JACK COFFEY served as chairman of the section on "How to Provide for
Individual Differences in Basic Business,
Personal Finance, and Economic Education."
KENNETH MARTIN served as recorder at one
of the sectional meetings. GENE HOUSER
is chairman of the Research Corr.mi ttee for
the IBEA and is currently working on plans
for a state-wide survey of office occupations.
. . . JOHN D. MAINS
has been elected
chairman of the
Greater St. Louis
Accounting Careers
Council, an organization comprised
of delegates from
the American Accounting Association, the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the Institute of Internal Auditors, the
Financial ExecuJohn Mains
tives Institute,
and the National
Association of Accountants. An instructor
in accounting, Mains is a graduate of St.
Louis University and passed examinations
to become a CPA in Illinois, Missouri, and
the District of Columbia.
. ROY E. THOMAS is collaborating with
Prof. Alfonso Aguilar Alvarez of Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City in writing
a book, Principles of Marketing, for use in
universities throughout Spanish America.
Author of Es s avs QI!. Mexico, as well as
numerous articles which have appeared in
both English- and Spanish-langua ge publi-

cations, Thomas has visited nearly all
Latin American countries. During the
past summer he encircled the Caribbean
and Gulf of Mexico by plane. The two
authors met at the University of Texas
six years ago where they were graduate
students.
. . . A summary of ELISE PALMER's doctoral dissertation was published in
the Alpha Epsilon Delta Pi Epsilon
Journal. Her
s tucly, "Development and
Evaluation of
MultipleChannel Dictation Tapes
in Beginning
Shorthand
Classes," was
one of 14 selected in the
United States
to be submitted for the
Delta Pi
Epsilon
Elise Palmer
award for
outstanding
research in business education. Another recent publication of Mrs. Palmer's,
"Significant Research Findings in
Shorthand and Transcription," appeared in the Illinois Business Education Association publication, Si~­
nificant Research in Business Education. This article was based on a
speech given by her at the IBEA meeting
of the 36th Annual Illinois Vocational
Association Convention.
. . . Two articles by JOSEPH M. THORSON
have been accepted for publication. They
are "Pricing in Forei gn Trade in the Soviet-Type Economies" \·lhich will appear in
the spring issue of Busine s s Horizons, and
"Poland 1 s International Trade, 19Lf6-63,"
&gt;vhich Hill appear in the December issue
of the American Economist, International
Section. The latter article, an abstract
from his doctoral dissertation, uses Poland as a point of illustration in examining some problems in foreign trade pricing.

�- 7 -

"There seems to be some validj. t y to the
slogan of 'Polish trade offensive,'" says
Thorson. "The international trade of Poland has been growing steadily in recent
years. As far as its geography is concerned, Poland's forei gn trade continues
to be a hi ghly concentrated affair. As
much· as 61.0 per cent of the export and
61.2 per cent of import concluded by Poland in 1964 wa s with the Soviet-bloc
nations. Hence, only 39 per cent of export and 33.8 per cent of import of Poland
finds its way at present outside of the
Communist camp.
"It is worthy of note that Poland has of
late been expanding its trade with nonCommunist countries somewhat more actively
than its trade inside the bloc. During
the 1963-64 period her trade turnover with
the Industrial West increased from about
$950 million in 1963 to over $1 billion in
1964, and the newly-developing countries
from $223 million in 1963 to $272 million
in 1964.
"Poland has traditional trade relations
with the West. She needs trade for a number of reasons: (a) The West is a producer
of a very hi gh quality of goods not available on the CEMA market, but badly needed
for industrialization; (b) trading contracts with the West g ive Poland an opportunity to learn the high technology of the
West and at the same time employ hi ghest
efficiency in its own industry; and (c)
trade with the West in relation to other
trading partners places Poland in a better
bargaining position.
"However, a continuous shortage of hard
currency and difficulties in obtaining new
loans and in meetin~ payments were some of
the factors tha t produced problems for Poland's economy. Inability to raise exports to pay for imports was also responsible for Poland's redirection to trade
with the Bloc nations, especially with the
USSR.
"The appreciation of trade ~v ith the developing countries is important because
Poland needs direct sources of raw mate-

rials. She needs to gain nev1 markets
for her industrial products, particularly machines and industrial equipment. So the expansion of trade with
the countries retarded in their economic development is beneficial to
Poland. In view of the fact that this
expansion is limited by Poland's possibilities as re gards both exports and
imports, it is necessary to concentrate
on some selected countries, which offer
prospects of a development most advantageous to both sides.
"There is very little evidence to suggest that Poland ts.. foreign trade will
become West oriented a gain, as in the
past. Undoubtedly, the Soviet Union
and the Socialist bloc will remain for
Poland both a source of industrial raw.
materials and a market for her expanded
output of industrial products. However,
the more liberal trend toward trading
with the West is visibly in offing in
the Soviet bloc, at least for the present.
Small nations like Poland, short of hard
currency, are trying to improve their
balance of payment position, and to
demonstrate some 1 independence' from
the Soviet sphere of interest.
"Neverthele s s, there is v ery little
likelihood that the Polish regime will
concentrate on trade decisions based
solely on the economic factors. Unfortunately, in many instances, the
latter will be outweighed by political
considerations."
Thorson is appearing every four weeks
on the Helen Harne Walters Show over
WOKZ. His first discussion was on
October 13, his second on November 17.
The unrehearsed, audience participation
program is heard Honday throu gh Friday
from 9:15 to 10:00 a.m.
EDUCATION DIVIS ION NE\&lt;JS
Four members of the division participated in a pro gram on the Governor's
Committee on Literacy and Learning held

�- 8 October 19 at Holiday Inn , Edwardsville.
At the meeting the Governor's program was
discussed and Peter Lewis, coordinator of
the program, was introduced. Participants
included H. DENE SOUTHWOOD, ROBERT H.
STEINKELLNER, GEORGE V!ILKINS, and RALPH
W. RUFFNER.

Education Association, this journal is
a leading publication in the field of
elementary education. Carpenter's article concerns the elementary school
curriculum today, and offers a point
of view regarding curriculum building
and curriculum revision.

. . . ROSE~ARIE ARCHANGEL is concluding
a second two-year term as president of
the St. Louis Field Hockey Association.
The association has been entertaining
touring teams from Argentina and Switzerland, the United States and United States
Reserve teams, holding clinics for local
high schools, and providing opportunities
for competition in the sport for post-high
school participants. The group has traveled extensively, both within the state
and in neighboring states, to participate
in matches.

. WALTER C. KLEIN attended the
district meeting of the Illinois Association of Health Physical Education
and Recreation held at the Wood River
High School October 29.

. . . Miss Archangel and BABETTE MARKS
were in Chicago October 30 to play on
the hocky team matched against the British
Isles Touring Team. While the score was
4-0 in favor of the visiting team, it
should be remembered that field hockey is
the "international game" for women all
over the world~ except in the United
States, where the game was introduced
just before the turn of the century.
Miss Archangel was in Milwaukee November
13-14 for the Midwest Sectional Field
Hockey Tournament. Miss Marks, also chosen to the team to play in tournament,
accompanied representatives of the Women's
Recreation Association to the Illinois
Athletic and Recreation Federation of
College Women annual conference at Ea st
Bay Camp, Bloomington, on those dates.
. GORDON BLISS has been appointed
faculty representative for the Edwardsville campus to the Illinois Citizens
Education Council. His appointment was
made by Prof. M. R. Sumption, Education
Administration and Supervision, University
of Illinois.
· . . "First Catch a Curriculum" by REGAN
CARPENTER will appear in the January issue
of The National Elementary Principal. Published under ausp i ce s of the National

. . . JOHN H. SCHNABEL, reGistrar and
director of admis-sions, attended the
43rd annual meeting of the Illinois
Association of Collegiate Registrars
and Admissions Officers held at Rock
Island October 27-29. He was one of
six panelists discussing "The Registrar/Admissions Officer as Listener/
Adviser to Student, Parent, Rejected
Applicant." Robert McGrath, registrar at the Carbondale campus, served
as toastmaster at the banquet held on
the evening of October 28.
. HERBERT F. A. SMITH reported on
legislation to the Illinois Association
for Student Teaching which met at Augustana College in Rock Island October
8-9. Smith, director of student teaching, s aid the Edwardsville campus has
100 student teachers serving in area
schools and expects this number to
increase to almost 500 during the current school year. Also attending the
meeting at Augustana College was EARL
MORRIS.
• . . President Morris has appointed
MARK TUCKER to represent the University at the Higher Education Coordinating Council of Metropolitan St.
Louis' Educational Committee for Responsible Citizenship. Tucker has
been invited to be a member of the
Board of Advisers for the Digest of
the Mentally Retarded. He is also
a member of the Medical and Scientific
Advisory Board of United Cerebral Palsy
of Illinois. On October 22 Prof. Tucker
was a participant at the Madison, Bond,

�- 9 Clinton and St. Clair Counties Institute.
He addressed teachers of children who
are in classes for the educable mentally
handicapped and teachers of children who
are physically disable d. Tucker spoke
November 6 at the annual meetinG of United
Cerebral Palsy of Illinois meeting in
Carbondale.
. . • "The Perceptual Or ganization of
Effective Counselor," written by DAN U.
SOPER, has been picked a s one of the outstanding research contributions to the
field of counseling psychology.
Selection of his
article was made
by the Scientific
Affairs Committee
of the Division of
Counseling Psycholo gy of the
American Ps y chological Association. He received
a Certificate of
Commendation from
APA for the article which appeared
in the Journal of
Counseling Ps y Dan Soper
chology in 196J .
This is the first
time awards have been Given by the or ganization for outstanding research in this
field. Soper's article was also a finalist
in this year's Research of the Year Award
given by the American Personnel and Guidance Association.
. . . American civili zat ion is now ripe
for a cultural renais sanc e, accordinG to
FRANCIS T. VILLEMAIN , who joined the division this fall. He drew the conclusion
in a report, to be publ is hed by the U. S.
Office of Education, de livered at a seminar in art education, s ponsored by the
federal agency at Pennsy lvania State University. Villema in also said that education in the art s " in the free society of
the forthcomin g era" sho uld be at th e
forefront of educational effort.

11

0ur new role with other peoples of the
world is one of the IT.ost dramatic developments of the era we are moving
through," he commented. "Art education
does well to address itself to these
involvements.
"It seems to me imperative that scholars not make recommendations to the
public about the ideals of a civilization that are not the best product of
their inquiries. . . . So it is with
considerable care that I suggest that
American civilization has reached a
point where it can and indeed should
direct its energies and resources in
behalf Of a C'UltUTa'l renaissance. 11
. . . GEORGE WILKINS was one of the
speakers at the Seventh Annual Education Conference of the Southwestern
Division Are~ Council of the Illinois Federation of Teachers, American
Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, held
at the East St. Louis Senior High
School October 8. He spoke on "Trends
in Education." The same day he served
as chairman of the Industrial Arts and
Technical Education discussion group
at the Marquette Division of the Illinois Education Association Seventh
Annual Meeting held at Highland
Community Schools. On October 15
he spoke at the Rockford Teachers
Institute held at West Senior High
School in Rockford. His topic was
"Trends and Issues: Elementary Grades. 11
He addressed the Presbyterian Boy
Scout Troop in Edwardsville November 1
at its Court of Honor meeting and presented the Silver Beaver award to one
of the scouts. "The Functions of the
School Problems Commission" was discussed by Hilkins November 9 when he
spoke at the Pike County ParentTeachers Association Conference at
the Barry Hi gh School.
. "Developing the Grapheme-Phoneme Relationship," an article
by DAVID BEAR, appeared in the
November issue of Education national

�- 10 magazine. A nationall y known reading
consultant, Bear has contributed numerous
articles to local, state and national magazines in the area of readin g and administration.

. . . A letter written by RICHARD SWERDLIN
appeared in the October issue of the Phi
Delta Kappan.
FINE ARTS DIVISION NEHS

. . . VIRGINIA HARRIS has been appointed
to the Madiso~ County, Illinois Special
Education Committee. She is one of seven
members appointed to the committee which
will study needs of special education students in Madison County and develop plans
which must be submitted to the state council by 1967. The committee was established
by Wilbur Trimpe, Madison County superintendent of schools, as a result of House Bill
1407. Members are appointed for four years.
We st Vir3inia Wesleyan Colle ge has
chosen l1YLLAN SMYERS as one of the seven
"Individuals \1ho
Have Made Significant Contributions to Music
Education in West
Virginia." Professor Owen Hest
of Hesleyan will
publish a chapter
on these seven
persons. Smyers'
participation in
music activities,
positions of leadership, teaching,
and other qualifications \vhich
resulted in his
selection -v;ill
be included. The
Education Division
professor earned his bachelor's and master's
degrees in public school music and his doctor of education de gree from Indiana University. His dissertation was on the status of
music in elementary sc hoo ls of VJes t Vir g inia.
Smyers \ ·las state supervisor of music in that
state before coming to SIU in 1959.
RICHARD SPEAR spoke on the safety
and education portion of the Illinois
Association for Health , Physical Education,
and Recreation Program at the Hotel Pere
Marquette in Peoria on November 18 .

JEROME BIRDI1AN r.ead a paper on "Theatre
and Politics in Brazil" at the Latin
American section meeting of the annual
American Educational Theatre Association
Convention held in Miami. The paper was
an elaboration of a request from section
chairman Frank McMullan of Yale University for Birdman to prepare a report
based on his · experi-ences as a lecturer
for the U. S. Information Service in
Brazil during the summer of 1964.
Last summer Birdman completed translation of the first materials in English
on the history of the Brazilian theatre
from Jesuit efforts in the 17th century
to 1948. He distributed a chronology
and a critical biblio graphy of Brazilian
theatre history at the convention.
Birdman is serving as consultant to a
group of adults in the Cahokia and Dupo
areas who are forming a new community
theatre. He has previously organized
or directed communit y theatres in
Champai gn, Illinois; Edgewood, Maryland;
and Vincenza, Italy. "Only the names
of Places had Dignity'' is the title
of a speech Birdman gave recently at
the Metro-East Zonta Club, an organization of leading business and professional
women. The speech dealt with the problems of denotation in a connotative world.
The speech's title came from one of the
famous passages in Heming\vay 1 s ~ Farewell
to Arms.
. . . ANN CAREY received the American
Cancer Societ y 's Certificate of Appreciation award September 23 at the annual dinner mee ting of the Society
held in Augustine' s Restaurant, Belleville. Miss Carey receiv ed the award
for her volunteer work as speech patholosist durin g the past six years.
On November 3 she spoke to the Red
Cross first-aid instructors of the
area on the special first-aid needs
of larnygectomt::c:s . The meeting was

�- 11 -

held at the American Red Cross office in
East St. Louis. Miss Carey was toastmistress at the 69th anniversary dinner
of Division I, Ancient Order of Hibernians,
held at the Knights of Columbus Building,
East St. Louis, on November 6.
. . . At the November 12 meeting of the
SIU board of trustees, DALE FJERSTAD \vas
granted a sabbatical leave for fall and
winter quarters next year to work on his
doctorate.
The Gift," an oil painting by VliLL
FREUND, is being exhibited by invitation
in the Trans-Mississippi Exhibition at
Davis Gallery, Stephens College, Columbia,
Missouri. His watercolor, 11 Psychiatrist 1 s
Desk," has been juried and accepted and is
now on exhibition in the Alabama v!atercolor
Society National Competition, Birmingham
Museum of Art.
•

•

•

11

• . . JOHN KENDALL was in lilevl York City
November 9 for an advisory committee
meeting on the New York State Council on
the arts. The increasing shortage of
string players in America and possible
solutionc was the topic of discussion.
On l~ovember 13 Kendall and HILLIAM MAGERS
were soloists with the St. Louis Philharmonic in a performance of Mozart's
"Sinfoine Concertante" for violin and viola.
On November 26-27 Mr. Kendall conducted the
Iowa All-State Orchestra at Des Moines. The
group of 200 selected high school musicians
performed for the Iowa State Music Educators.
During the month of October Kendall attended
the Upper Peninsula Music Association meetings in Iron City, Michigan, for a workshop
and demonstration on 11 Listen and Play--Some
Ideas on String Teachin;3, 11 v1ent to Dartlesville, Oklahoma, for a workshop and rehearsal v7ith the Community Symphony, and
to Oklahoma City for the Oklahoma Music
Educations meetings and ASTA meetings for
a lecture and demonstration.
. . CATHERINE NILOVICa ~vas one of 30
craftsmen invited to participate in the
Vera I. Mott Designer-Craftsman Exhibition
held at the University of Missouri during
November. The exhibit "&lt;;las sponsored by
the American Craftsman's Council and the

Extension Division of Missouri U. A
Missouri Crafts Conference was held
November 5-7 to coincide with this
exhibition. Mrs. Milovich exhibited
three mosaic plaques. Since July Mrs.
Milovich has been meeting as a member
of the advisory committee for developing
art curricula for the Mark Twain Institute for Academically Talented High
School Students which serves the Greater Metropolitan Area. Her paper collage, "Sky, Rocks and Vlater," was shown
in the recent St. Louis Artists' Guild
exhibit and a stitched collage by her
was shown in the Craft Exhibition at
Maryville ColLege.held in October.
Mrs. Milovich is currently showing
in the special Enamel Exhibition at
the Craft Alliance Gallery in St. Louis.
. JOHN D. RANDALL has been elected
secretary-treasurer of the Southern
Illinois Chapter of the American Institute of Architects and a rr1ember
of the Association of University Architects.
. . . JOHN RICHARDSON's article "On
the Relevance of Early Modern Art to
Contemporary Education" has been accepted for publication in The Art
Journal. The principal U. S. magazine for art historical studies, the
Journal is published by the ColleGe
Art Association. The article is a
critique of the relation between
"what we call innovation and what
we call creativity." Hainly, he
deals with the emergence of the idea
that the history of art entails a
perpetual revolution of style and
that the fine arts, thus, are always
in a state of change. According to
Richardson, this notion misrepresents
both the history of art prior to Cubism
and, as well, the character of the movements that have succeeded it. "It is
a dogma that can be tolerated only by
historians thoroughly conditioned by
the modern mystique of progress. But
it accounts for the obsessive feeling
by contemporary artists that for their
work to be good and lasting it must be
original in the revolutionizing sense

�- 12 -

that Cubism was. And it also seems to
justify the tyranny of the mode that
reigns in most university art departments."
Richardson examines the methods of C~zanne
Kandinsky, Picasso and others to demonstrate
that "a peculiar decisivene s s" is a more
fundamental property of modern painting
than is what normally r; oes under the name
of originality. . . . An essay entitled
"Dada, Camp and the Node Called Pop" by
r-ichardson, to be published by the American
Society for Aesthetics in its periodical,
The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism,
~trasts th;-nihilistic movement of the
twenties--Dadaism--and the contemporary
attitude knmvn as "Camp" (which treats the
serious '·Jith frivolity and is solemn CL bout
frivolous things) with the Pop Art movement.
All of them reject the aristocratic conception of art that has dominated criticism
since the Renaissance with notions of coherence, inte~rity and excellence. Pop
differs in openly accepting the morbidities
of mass society and discriminating a gainst
the best in order to commemorate the ~JOrst,
r-ichardson writes. "Hhen so many hold in
contempt the virtues they publicly parade
it is to be expected that some will proclaim the superiority of mankind's coarsest
instincts. Likewise, when avant garde
painting and sculpture are given a role
in the prestige stratagems of the Cold War
and made celebrities by the state, there
will be men whose mis guided sense of justice compels them to promote the retro grade
as the thing that is really and truly representative of their nation. The thin g
that we should ask, however, is not what
best represents the people ~ut, instead,
Hhat represents their best." Incidental
to his analyse s of Dada, Camp and Pop,
Richardson presents some new critical
approaches to the subject matter.
. . . A feature story and three pictures
of RUTH SLENC ZYNSKA appeared in the November 9 issue of the S t. Louis Globe-De mocrat.
The article Has Hritten by Lucinda Herron,
staff Hriter of the Globe.
DOROTHY TULLOS S lectured November 3
at the Second Annual Conference and Workshop for Elementary School Music Teachers
and Supervisors hel d in St. LoMis. He~

topic, "Concepts Related to the Listenin g
Program in the Upper Elementary School
Nusic Program," v1as presented to the
Nissouri Music Teachers and Supervisors
section of the Nissouri Educators Association.
. . . LLOYD BLAKELY Has in Chicago
November 26-27 for the forty-first
annual meeting of the National Association of Schools of Nusic. The
general sessions this year were held
at the Palmer House. Roger Stevens,
Special Assistant to the President
of the United States, talked about
the newly-cre.a .ted. Ng.tional Foundation
on the Arts and Humanities. Stevens
is also chairman of the National Council on the Arts, a director of the
Netropolitan Opera Association, a
member of the board of directors of
the National Symphony Orchestra Association and chairman of the John F.
Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts. The NASN has been designated
by the National Commission on Accrediting as the responsible agency
for the accreditation of all music
de gree curricula with specialization
in the fields of applied music, music
theory , composition, music therapy,
musicolo gy, and music as a major in
liberal arts programs. The music
faculty at EdHardsville, of which
Blakeley is chairman, has been a
member of NASN since 1964.
. . . Seven new music faculty
members have been added in the
Fine Arts Division since the last
school year. LESLIE BREIDENTHAL,
lecturer in voice, a doctoral candidate at the University of Nichigan,
where he has been a teaching fellow
since 1962, received his bachelor's
and master's de grees from Columbia
University. HAr-REN JOSEPH, professor of music education, came to
this campus from Eastern Nichigan
Universit y \vhere he Has head of
the music department. He received
his Ph.D. from Boston University
and has also studied at Harvard and
Columbia. \l iLLIS A. STEVENS, asso-

�- 13 -

ciate professor in piano, holds a doctorate from Eastman School of Husic.
He received his B.A. from Columbia University and his master's from Juilliard
School of Music. Before coming to SIU,
he ,vas head of the piano department at
Whitman College in Halla Halla, Wa shington.
HERBERT OBERLAG, assistant professor in
oboe, v1as a member of the music department
at Baldwin-1Ja llace College for ten years.
Born in St. Louis, he received his bachelor's degree at the St. Louis Institute
of Music and his M. M. in wood&gt;-7inds and
theory from Indiana University, where he
is a candidate for the Mus.D. KENT PERRY,
assistant professor in violin, came to
SIU from Maryville Colle ge in Tennessee,
where he had taught since 1961. He is a
graduate of the University of Tennessee
and holds a master's de gree from NorthHestern University v1here, during summers,
he has been continuing graduate work.
HILLIAH HAGERS, instructor in viola, vms
gr aduated from the University of Southern
California. He received his master's degree from the Universit y of California in
1953, and is Harking on his doctorate at
the University of Illinois. JOSEPH PIVAL
is an instructor in cello. He received
his master's degree in June fro m the
University of Illinois, where he also did
his under graduate work.

NEP STRING QUARTET
PERFORHS FOR AREA SC HOOLS

The new string quartet at SIU's Edwardsville campus has been playing a series
of pro grams in the area public schools.
Hembers of the quartet are JOHN KENDALL
and KENT PERRY, violinist; WILLIAM
HAGERS, violist; and JOSE PH PIVAL,
celloist.
HUHANITIES DIVIS ION NEHS

. EVELYN BUDDEMEYER served in a dua l
capacity at the Illinois Art Education
Association Conference held in Sprin8 field
November 4-6. She was a panel member of
the College Se ction Meeting which discussed ;'The Acceptance of Nev7 Ideas, 11
and &gt;-las on . the hos pita 1 i ty and planning
committee for the opening of the special
Illinois Artist-Craftsman Shmv held in
conjunction Hi th the IAEA conference . . .
On November 17 Hrs. Buddemeyer s poke at
the Bri;_3hton Civic Lea c;ue on ''Nevl Fiel ds
for Homen." The folloHin g day she t ook
part in an evaluation of schools at the
Brooklyn Community Unit, St. Clair County .
On November 23 she took part in Careers
Night at the Alton Hi gh School.

NICHOLAS JOOST was the principal speaker
November 13 at the New En gland Colle ge
English Association meeting in Horcester,
Massachusetts. Subject of his talk was
"The Dial and the Taste of the 1920s."
Following his morning tal k at the meeting,
Joost joined an afternoon panel to discuss the same subject. His fellow panelists included Ihab Has san from Wesleyan
Univer s ity; Daniel Cotton Rich, assistant
director of the Chicago Art Institute;
1: illard Thorp, Princeton Universit y;
and James F. Beard, the meeting 's host,
of Clark Universit y . Transcripts of
Joost's speech and the panel discussion
wi ll be printed in The Hassachusetts

�- 14 -

Review, literary journal published by
Mount Holyoke Colle ge, the University
of Massachusetts, and Amherst Colle ge.
. . . JAN BRUNVAND was program chairman
for the annual meeting of the American
Folklore Society in Denver the weekend
of November 20-21. Brunvand came to
SIU in September to teach and to conduct
research in southern Illinois folklore.
He has written a book and numerous articles on the folklore of the West , Midwest and South , and he is associate editor of the Journal of American Folklore.
. . . Professors ROBERT PERKINS, GEORGE
LINDEN, WALTER GOEDECKE, and PIETER VAN
NUIS attended meetings of the Society
for Phenomenology and Existential Phil osophy held at the University of Wiscons in
October 28-30.
. . . Linden spoke at Washington University October 21 on "Judaism." His poe m,
"Call No Man," has been purchased by
Villiers Publications, Ltd., and will appear in a forthcomin g issue of the poetry
magazine Trace.
. . . "Law vs. Love," an article by GERALD
RUNKLE, appeared in the July issue of
Darshana International, a journal directed
by an international board of scholars, with
editorial offices in India. The article
is a comparative study of the ethics of
Kant and of Jesus. These two doctrines
are archetyp es of ethical thought: one
stresses law, the other stresses love.
"It is argued that the gap between the
two cannot satisfactorily be bridged,"
says Runkle. "Reasons are given for re jecting one and building on the other,
and for choosing a theory of action over
a theory of being. 11 Runkle has si gned
a contract with Ronald Press for his
work, Development of liJestern Political
Theory. Twenty chapters are completed;
five are yet to be done. The manuscript
is scheduled for delivery to Ronald ne x t
summer.
· . . JOHN FRANCIS McDERMOTT served a s
general chairman of the Trans-Missis s ippi
Frontier Conference held on the campu s

November 11-12. He delivered the final
address, "The Frontier Re-examined,''
at the dinner meeting which climaxed
the conference. JULES ZANGER was one
of the conference speakers. His topic
was "The Frontiersman in Popular Fiction. 11
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY DIVISION NEWS
A $2,000 grant from the National Science
Foundation has been awarded SIU in support of research being done by DAVID
SLOTBOOM, physics instructor at the
East St. Louis Center, in the field
of plasma physics ..which he began last
summer. Slotboom came to SIU in September from California State Polytechnic
College, where he was an assistant professor. A Naval officer from 1948 to
1964 , he received his master's degree
in 1963 from the U. S. Navy Postgraduate
School 2~ Monterey, California .
. BILL BENNEWITZ 1 s book, Deduction,
has arrived from Edwards Bros., Inc.,
and is being used in the general studies
course GSD 112a
and in Math 300 .
A local high
school is also
using it in an
advanced mathematics class.
Bennewitz expects to place
the book in
several other
high schools
before the
end of the
quarter to
test it thoroughly for
ease of teachBill Bennewitz
ing. A preliminary edition written for use at the Edwardsville
campus, its aim is to lead the reader to
a clear understanding of the concept of
deduction. "The ability to understand
and to construct proofs is treated as a
skill which, like any other skill, can
be learned by formal study and practice,"

�- 15 -

accordinr:; to the author. "The basic
~rinciples of proof are introduced first
~nd are then applied to the study of certain elementary mathematical systems.
Althou~h the applications in the text
are primarily to mathematics, the principles which are introduced are applicable
to the rational organization to any system of ideas, whether it be an elementary
problem in physics, an expository theme,
or a general theory such as euclidean
geometry or quantum mechanics." The
book is the culmination of several years'
experience in teachin~ deduction to general
studies students at the freshman level.
So far as is knm·m, the approach and scope
are unique.
. F. H. FIRSCHING read his paper on
"Experimental and Calculated Values for
Logarithmic Distribution Coefficients of
Rare Earth Iodates Precipitated from Homogeneous Solution" at the First Annual Midwest M~eting of the American Chemical Society held November 5 in Kansas City,
Missouri. A paper by Firsching and Thomas
Paul, a senior majoring in chemistry at
the Alton Center, was also read at the
meeting. The pap e r wac entitled "The
Solubility of the Rare Earth Iodates."
Paul attended the conference with Firsching.
. . . DEBORAH TEPPER RAIMO received an
invitation to be a regular reviewer for
Zentralblatt fU.r. Mathematik, a German publication devoted to reviewing current
mathematical r e s earch papers appearin~ in
journals throughout the -.;vorl d. Mrs. Raimo
has been selected to represent the Mathematical Association of America as a visiting lecturer in the National Science Foundation program of sendin~ speakers to colleges and universities throu n- hout the COlm"'
try " to strengthen and stimulate
the mathematics program." She has also been asked
to give a series of lectures on her own
current research at a seminar in analysi s
at Washington University. Her ab~tract
entitled "Inversion and Representation of
the Reduced Poisson-Hankel Transfor~' appeared in the October issue of the Notices
of the American l''lathematical Societ~---

. . . In July IRHIN PARRILL and his wife
were guests of the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratories operated by the University
of California for the Atomic Energy Commission at Los Alamos, New Mexico. They
were able to examine the equipment and
to interview the scientists directing
research on missile assemblies, lens
effects on criticalities, properties
of the DNA molecule in cancer cells,
pilot plant research on the design of
the proposed new proton accelerator
and the Sherwood Project.
Through the "Expe riment in International
Living" the Parri-11s ..were invited to
join a charter flight to Europe with a
plane load of college students returning
to Europe after a visit in the United
States. Stops were made at Gander, Newfoundland; Keflavik, Iceland; Copenhagen,
Denmark, and Amsterdam, Holland. The
Parrills then took a train trip to Hanover, Germany, where they picked up the
Volkswagon bus "to use in university
hopping, camping and to visit their
daughter, RosaLee, an Air Force nurse
at Toule Rossieres Air Force Base, 11 France."
The first university visited was Koln
"where members of the chemistry staff
were very hospitable and generous of
their time in showing off scientific
equipment and research in progress."
The University of Bonn was host to
Gesellschaft Duetscher Chemiker during
the stay there. "The University of
Heidelberg was not only great in tradition but was nearing completion of extensive building programs in chemistry
and physics. Freiburg uas both beautiful and traditional. Most impressive
was the University of Zurich where
Einstein taught and where he derived
the now famous equation which they are
trying so hard to capitalize on at
Los Alamos.
A most enlightening and gratifying
experience was the visit to Das GmelinInstitut FUr Anor ganische Chemie und
Grenzgebiete in der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Frankfurt am Main to observe

�- 16 -

efforts to classify and or~anize the tremendous volume of chemical information
being published throughout the world.
Professor Dr. Eirch Pietsch, director,
was seriously ill and Dr. Isa Kubach
served as hostess and personal ~ uide. The
University of Frankfurt is woefully congested and crowded by the tremendous industrial comple x that has grown up around
it. Plans are being studied to move the
entire operation outside the city." The
return trip to the States "was also made
by university, The University of Sev en
Seas equipped with dormitories and classrooms for about 900 students and a course
of study that take the 'university' around
the ~10rld each semester.''
. ROBERT PENDERGRASS was one of the
speakers at the Southv1estern Sectional
Meetin~ of the Illinois Council of Teachers
of Mathematics which met in Greenville
October 22. Speakins on "Probability and
Statistics in the Hi3h School," Pender grass
defined statistics as "the science of decision making in the face of uncertaint y ."
He discussed some common uses and some
abuses of statistics and commented on
popular opinions on the subject. "Statistics is generally admitted to be an analytical tool of importance in all of the
sciences. Wi despread applications of statistics to problems of everyday life seem
to be resultin~ in some acceptances of an
opinion expressed by H. G. Wells that
'Statistical thinkin g will one day be as
necessary for efficient citizenship as the
ability to read and write. 111 In order to
develop the necessary knowledge of probability and statistics, certain topics
should be taught at the hi~h school level,
says Pendergrass, who presented a seventopic outline for such a hi gh school course.
"Physics and the Fine Arts" was the
subject of a paper presented by WILLIAM
SHAI.V at the conference of the Illinois
Section of the American Association of
Physics Teachers which was held October C
at Aurora Colle ge . Shaw said that phys icists should find vmys to make phys i cs fun,
useful and practical to the non scienti s t.
"This can be done ~vi thout r:1ak ing content
trivial," he sa i d, and i llustrated by

reference s to "Physics of Music and Acoustics," a course which he has taught twice
at SIU. Shaw also discussed other courses
of interest to non scientists, such as
"History of Physics," "Physics of Li ght
and Color," "Physics of Home and Shop,"
etc. He emphasized the importance of
the realization that physics today is
indeed a part of human culture. "Let's
Abolish X" was the somewhat facetious
title of a talk by Shav1 before the Chica go section of the American Association
of Physics Teachers held November 13 at
the new campus of the University of Illinois. He made a case for reductions in
ambiguit y and r .e.dvn.dap_cy in the notation
employed in some physics textbooks, especially those used for general studies
courses. He also mentioned the simplifications introduced by the use of a
notation he first introduced in 1948
for indicating powe rs of 10, now becorning more common in the physics literature. At a meeting of military
en~ineers November 9 at Scott Air Force
Base, Prof. ShaH spoke on "Sea Animals
and Submarines."

SOCIAL SCIENCES DIVISION NEWS
"Trends in Manufacturing in Missouri,"
a comprehensive analysis of manufacturing in
Missouri written by JAMES
E. COLLIER,
has been published by the
Business and
Public Administration Research Center
of the University of Missouri. It is the
ei ghth monograph reportin g
on a study of
Hissouri 1 s
economy being
James Collier
conducted by
the Center.
In his article, Collier, lon g interested

�- 17 -

in the economic aspects of Missouri's
location and physical characteristics,
analyzes employment and value added for
each class of industry and the role of
recent trends in the composition of
manufacturing in the United States and
Missouri. He also reviews the impact
of manufacturing on Missouri in the nation, and the location and structure of
manufacturing activity within the State.

significant amount of manufacturing is
in the smaller cities and in rural areas.
Their smaller labor force makes the relative importance of industry to the local
economy greater than the numerical values first suggest. Impact of added payroll is felt in retail sales and services
in the community. Conversely, closing
a small factory can be disastrous to a
small community.

An increased emphasis on the production
of durable goods and an actual or relative decline in processing primary raw
materials has been the most significant
change in the structure of manufacturing
in recent years, Collier concludes. This,
he says, may indicate a maturing of industry. He points out that most of the
rapidly growing industries of Missouri
have been producers of durable goods,
notably in aircraft, automobiles, and
the various types of machinery. Three
of the five major groups which have declined in employment are producers of
textiles, tobacco, and rubber products,
all non-durables. The other two showing
net losses in employment were durables:
lumber and wood products, and the primary
metal industries.

''In relation to their size, smaller
communities appear to be making more
aggressive attempts to attract new industry than the large centers. The
efforts of many - 1oca~- groups to attract
industry to their communities are spurred
by declining job opportunities on farms.
In some areas, replacement of obsolete
facilities and equipment with lower labor requirements has displaced workers,
or failed to provide additional jobs
for an expanding labor force."

According to Collier's report, manufacturing was the largest single source of
income for persons engaged in production
in 1960, the last year for which adequate
detailed data are available. Before 1948,
income to individuals engaged in retail
and wholesale trade was greater than income from manufacturing. "Manufacturing
is very unevenly distributed in Missouri,"
Collier says, "and some areas have high
industrial activity; elsewhere manufacturing
is only moderately developed, and in a few
areas almost entirely lacking. Most of
the large manufacturing establishments are
located in the metropolitan areas, with a
tendency for lar ge-scale employers to locate in suburban areas evident in the
Kansas City, St. Joseph, and St. Louis
Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area
(SMSA). II
In summarizing , Collier says that "in
spite of the dominance of urban areas a

The new edition of The World Book
Encyclopedia contains the article on
Missouri to which Collier cont~ibuted.
. . . ROBERT ERICKSON was in Colorado
Springs September 9-11 for a conference sponsored by the American Historical Association. Purpose of the
conference was to obtain information
and discuss history institutes for
public school teachers provided for
under NDEA.
JAMES HAAS is on leave in England
doing further research on "A Biography
of the Fourth Earl of Sandwich."
. . • LYNN IRVINE JR. has accepted a
two-year appointment to the Commission
on Mission Development from the Board
of Directors of the Council of Lutheran
Churches of Greater St. Louis. In his
letter of appointment to Mr. Irvine,
Rev. H. H. Mirly, executive secretary,
commented in part: "The long-range
goal of the Commission is to help
structure, on the basis of survey,
study and evaluation, a total mission
outreach for Lutheranism in this area.
You have been chosen for this important

�- 18 Co~mission because of your demonstrated
interest and background in this field
and for the important contribution you
can make to this work on behalf of the
kingdom here." Irvine was also a member
of the survey team which recently prepared a 37-paGe report on the Enrollment
Projection and Buildins Capacity for
Kenilworth School District 38, Cook County, Illinois. The survey report included
a census enumeration of all children resident in the District below the age of 16,
an enrollment projection, and recommendations concerning building capacity. The
survey was conducted by School Research
Services, College of Education, SIU,
Carbondale.

. . • KURT GLASER vJent to Germany November 18 where he and other scholars met
with the East-European Study Association
of Weisbaden to plan an international conference on "Problems of Central Europe,"
to be held next year. Later he gave four
lectures under the sponsorship of the
universities of Nurenbeq~, Munich, VJuerzburg and Hamburg and two informal talks
to student organizations of the University
of Bonn and the Free University of Berlin.
His lecture t opics included "The Changing
Structure of Vlorld Politics," "Idealism
and Realism--American Foreign Polici e s,"
and "Germany and East Europe as Seen
Through American Eyes." He returned to
the campus December 3.

Donald Taylor

. . . A 192-page
book entitled
Marriage Counseling: New Dimensions in the
--Art of Helping
People by DONALD
TAYLOR has been
released by Publisher Charles
C. Thomas, Springfield. In his
book, Taylor considers in detail
cultural and social dimensions
and offers practical direction

to doctors, ministers, educators, psychologists, sociologists, social workers,
and lawyers. He brings to the art of
counseling the dimension of reciprocity
--the consideration of two people taken
together--and he shows how to establish
an effective client-counselor relationship. He also discusses communication,
the problems of feeling, and personality
as they affect the marriage-relationship.
In the final chapter he sets forth a
philosophy of marriage, contrasting
the value of emphasizing ego decisions
with the traditional value of agreement
between husband and wife.
. . . ERNEST SCHUSKY- has recently had
published a supplementary text for advanced cultural and social anthropology
entitled Manual for Kinship Analysis.
The paperback edition was published by
Holt, Rinehart &amp; Winston.
RONALD YARBROUGH lectured October 11 on "The Geologic History of
Illinois" to the Carrollton Branch
of the American Association of University Homen. The meeting was held
in Kane, Illinois.
NEWS FROM STATE AND
NATIONAL PUBLIC SERVICES
On October 7 SEYMOUR MANN delivered the
principal luncheon address at a meeting
of the Chicago Chapter of the American
Society for Public Administration. Some
100 persons representing all levels of
government and many academic institutions in the Chicago metropolitan area
were in attendance. Mann's topic,
"Reflections on the Poverty Prosram-Political and Administrative Implications, 11 was based principally on his
observations of the community action
programs in St. Louis, Chicago, and
East St. Louis. In Chicago Professor
Mann has been conducting a study in
cooperation with the Urban Government
Studies Center at Loyola University,
and in East St. Louis he currently
serves as SIU's representative on the
Economic Opportunities Commission.

�- 19 -

As co-chairman of the State Agency-University Council, he attended committee
sessions on state recruitment and training
practices and needs re~arding :he public
service. November 5 he co-cha~red a full
meeting of the Council which was held in
Springfield. Professor HOHARD DAVIS serves
as a member of the Council from the Edwardsville campus, and Roye Bryant and Jack
Isakoff serve for the Carbondale campus.
Bryant is head of the University's Placement Service and lsakoff is professor of
government.
At the invitations of Bishops Chambers
and Cadigan, on November 19 Mann gave the
lead-off address at the opening dinner
of the Episcopal Hi-Diocesan Metro-St.
Louis Conference. The title of his talk
was "The Metropolitan Community--Realities
and Possibilities," which stressed the
nature of our current urban revolution
and its special impact on our own metropolitan area . . . . October 17-21 Mann
took part in the 48th Annual Conference
of the American Institute of Planners
held at the Hotel Sheraton-Jefferson in
St. Louis. Theme of the meeting was "The
Planner in Emergin~ Urban Society--A Confrontation." Mann was a member of the
committee which developed the program,
and during the course of the meeting he
served with Professor Perry Norton of New
York University, Professor Melvin Hebber
of the University of California, Berkeley,
and Dennis O'Harrow, executive director
of the American Society of Planning Officials, as a moderator for the discussion
groups. . . . During the week of November 14 the 7lst National Conference on
Government ·of the National Hunicipal League
was held at the Chase-Park Plaza in St.
Louis. Prof. Hann 'tJaS a panel member in
the workshop dealing with Civic Leaders
and Civic Organizations.
. CARL LOSSAU also represented the
Public Administration and Hetropolitan
Affairs Program at the American Institute
of Planners National Conference. Lossau
is an nctive member of the Institute and
has served the local Institute section and
chapter agencies in official capacities.
He was a participant in the conference

program, taking part as a resource person
and preparing a presentation for the workshop, "Metropolitan Planning for Air Resource Management--St. Louis Case Study. 11
. . . BERTON BRAUN, research associate,
represented the PAMAP at the 51st Annual
Conference of the International City Hanagers Association which was held in September in Montreal. The principal emphasis of the 1965 conference was on encouraging city managers to concentrate
more on dealing \vith the human problems
of cities, particularly those concerned
with poverty and urban redevelopment,
and devoting less .a~tention to the dayto-day management problems v7hich have
traditionally been their main concern.
The conference also dealt with the increasing significance of relationships
between federal, state, and local governments. In addition, several sessions
were devoted to acquainting mana~ers
with data processing operations and the
possible uses of computers in handling
current management problems.
. . . DAVID VAN HORN, assistant director of Placement Services, attended the
32nd Annual Conference of the Association for School, Colle~e and University
Staffing which met recently in Phoenix.
Van Horn is chairman of the Association's
Associate Hembership Committee, and v7as
recently elected to serve on the Executive Council.
. . . MAX HANSEL, supervisor of Placement Services, was ~uest of the Chicago
Board of Education October 27-28. Benjamin Willis, superintendent of schools,
was the banquet speaker. Those attending
toured four Chicago public schools, then
went to Evanston for the Illinois Association for School, College, and Staffing
annual state meeting. Ray Page, superintendent of public instruction and ex
officio member of SIU's board of trustees,
spoke at one of the sessions.
LILA TEER, consultant for SID's
Community Development Service, VJas honored November 13 by the East St. Louis
branch of the National Council of Negro

�-20 -

For her contribution to community
service, the East St. Louis Council chose
Hrs. Teer to receive its fifth annual Citizen A\vard at a banquet held at Pilgrim
Temple C.M.E. Church in East St. Louis.
Speaker at the banquet was John Kirkpatrick,
mmer and editor of the ~.J eekl y nev1spaper
The Crusader. Hrs. Teer joined the SIU
staffin December, 1958. Prior to that
she served eight years as assistant executive secretary of the Social Planning Council in East St. Louis. As a consultant
her duties include working with five neighborhood units of Community Pro gress, Inc.,
East St. Louis. She is also coordinatin3
consultant to the Council of Neighborhood
Units in that city. Last year she worked
with a sub-committee of CPI's education
committee in formin g the retarded children's
day camp program. Born in Tennessee, she
was reared in Chicago and received her B.S.
de gree from the University of Illinois,
where she majored in home economics. Hrs.
Teer has worked for the Illinois Emer gency
Relief Commission in Chicago, and from
193 9 to 1943 she was g irls' wo r k
supervisor for the National Youth Administration, organizing power sewing and
food programs. She has also served as
young adult pro gram director for the East
St. Louis Yl~ CA.
~oJ omen.

H. DENE SOUTHHOOD, head of SIU's Education Division, was principal speaker at
the December 11 meeting of alumni in
Macoupin and Montgomery counties, which
was held at Fazio 1 s in Benld. Southv10od
related some of his experiences in Thailand and Iran while he was community
development training adviser with U. S.
Operations Missions in those countries.
The Madison County Alumni Club met
December 4 at the Hotel Stratford in
Alton. Speaker was HAROLD CUTRIGHT,
visiting professor of business administration at the Edwardsville campus.
..•: : .

. . . Stookey and MILDRED ARNOLD were
in Chicago December 5-8 for the annual
District V meetings of the American
Alumni Council held at the SheratonChicago Hotel. Hr. Odaniell is serving
a two-year term as District V chairman.
NEHS OF STUDENT SERVICES
In October the S tudent Work and Financial Assistance Office began publishing a monthly bulletin geared to
the working student and the student
who might be seeking work or financial assistance in the future. PHILIP
ECKERT is in charge of the Student Work
and Financial Assistance pro gram.

. The Alumni Office at Edwardsville
has held a series of four alumni meetings
during the past two months. Arranged by
HARREN STOOKEY, field representative for
this campus, the first in the series was
held November 17 by the St. Clair County
Alumni Club. Held at Fischer's Restaurant
in Belleville, the pro gram featured Professor E. C. Coleman as speaker. Prof.
Coleman, chairman of a committee to s tudy
university-student relationships at SIU,
talked about student demonstrations and
unrest in ge neral. Coleman was winner of
the 196 5 Great Teacher Award sponsored by
the SIU Alumni Association, whose executive secretary is Robe rt Odaniell.

Nm,JS FROH THE LIBRARIES

The Monroe County Alumni Club, wh ich held
its annual fall meeting at Eberhardt's
Restaurant in Columbia November 19 had
as its speaker EARL FERRIS, senior ' land scape architect. He spoke on the development of the Edwa rds v ille campus.

OLLIE MAE FILLIAHS, education division
librarian, went to Alaska for her summer vacation, going by way of Albuquerque,
New Mexico, to Phoenix, Arizona. In
Phoenix she visited the Arizona State
Universit y library at Tempe. Headin g

NURSING DEPARTMENT NEHS
Mrs. MARGARET SHAY, chairman of the
Nursing Department , has been elected
to a tv70-year term on the eight-member
board of directors of the South Central
League for Nursing . The South Central
re g ion of the Illinois League for Nursing includes 21 counties.

�- 21 -

north, she visited the Grand Canyon,
Bryce Canyon, the University of Utah
library, the Horman Huse um, and the University of Washincton. From there she
went to Prince Rupert and boarded the
ferry to go throuGh the straits to Haines.
From Haines she went to the Alaskan Hichway, on to Fairbanks where she visited
the University of Al aska . On her way
home Hiss Wi lliams toured the northern
states. "By car, boat, plane and bus
across many miles and throuGh heat, cold,
the desert, mountains, tundra, hail and
rainstorms, I had one of the most enjoyable
vacations ever taken."

Mr s . Stims on received her bachelor of
journalism de gr ee from the University of
Hissouri. Sh e worked on s mall dail y newspapers in Arkansas and Oklahoma , and at
one time wa s the youn c est advertising mana ger o f a daily in Oklahoma. She later
joine d the Asso c iated Press, Arkansas
State Bureau in Little Rock, where she
covered the Arkans as State House and
Senate. She is a past editor in AP's
Southwestern Division Headquarters in
Kansas City.
TECHNICAL AND ADULT EDUCATION NE\·JS
...

.

.... .. . ...:.:~

. . . SHEILA STIHSON (Hrs. Stephen R., Jr.)
of Edwardsville has been appointed executive secretary of Friends of the Library.
She was named to the post last month by the
board of directors of the SIU Foundation
on the recommendations of Kenneth Hiller,
executive director of the Foundation, and
Ralph HcCoy, director of university libraries at SIU. Hrs. Stimson, whose office
wi ll be located in the University's new
Lovejoy Hemorial Library, wi ll promote
interest and membersh ip in Friends of the
Library amon3 students and facult y of both
campuses and the general public. Friend s
of the Library was conceived in 1960 to
encourage gifts of individual items, collections, and money to the libraries. In
a letter to Hr. HcCoy ~1ritten in 1960,
President John F. Kennedy said, "We cannot
be alert to the issue s of our society and
of the world at lar ge unl ess we are well
furnished with the insi ghts which are so
well afforded by the resources of a library."
President DELYTE W. MORRIS has s aid,
"There are many areas of library needs
that cannot be appropriately filled throu Gh
state appropriat ions. Every state university library that has achieved distinction
has benefited by the g ifts of private and
corporate donors. Hany friends of Southern
Illinois Universit y have already pre s ented
gifts of money and books to Horris Library
at Carbondale; others have expressed an
intent to do so ."

Bu ckminster Full er, professor of desi gn, gave the opening talk at the
Development Pro gram for Hiddle Hana Ge ment held October 29. He is shovm emphasizing a point with Max Roby of
KMOX-TV followin g an afternoon press
conference. Two pro grams were taped
by Roby an d a KHO ;~ -TV cameraman for
us e on October 20 an d 30 .
. E. R. CASSTEVENS, s upervisor
of Technical and Adult Education,

�- 22 -

spoke October 11 at a luncheon meetin3
of the Traffic Club of Greater St. Louis
at Bel Air East. In his talk on ''Transportation Education and Its Future,"
Casstevens described SID's pro~rams in
the traffic and transportation field and
told them about a movement to enlarge the
concept of movement of materials. "This
enlar~e d concep t , II h e sa~• d , II wou ld encompass the management of materials distribution in such a way as to eliminate
or minimize the handling of materials.
This could .have a profound effect on
transportation and transportation education. Also there is a trend away from
specialization \vhich, I believe, has already begun." On November 17 Casstevens
was part of a three-man panel participating
in a one-day conference of the Industrial
Relations Club of Greater St. Louis which
was held at DeVille Motor Hotel in St.
Louis.
The Development Program for Middle Management held its introductory session at Pere
Marquette State Park October 22-23. Participating were Casstevens, DALE BLOUNT
and ROBERT SEMPLE of Technical and Adult
Education; CAMERON NEREDITH, head of State

and National Services; and J. BRUCE THOHA:J,
assistant dean of academic affairs. The
Friday evenin3 session was attended by
HAROLD CUTRIGHT, PAUL SKJERSETII, EUGENE
VINCENT, RICHARD McKINNEY and PATRICK
\'!ILLIAMS of the Business Division.
(Casstevens, Blount and Semple are also
members of the Business Division.)
Heredith spoke on "Inhibiting Factors
in an Organization."
A pror;rain entitled "Development of Supervisors through Coaching;r Has presented
jointly by Casstevens and Dill Lovin,
assistant director of marketing traininr;
for Falstaff Brewi:ng Gorporation, on
November 2. The occasion was the third
meeting for 1965-66 of the St. Louis
chapter, American Society for TraininG
and Development which was held at Holiday
Inn in East St. Louis. R. Elzy, training
supervisor for Olin Nathieson Chemical
Corporation, was moderator.
Robert Semple, coordinator of associate
degrees in business, visited the Vocational-Technical Institute near Carbondale October 7-8, attending classes and
observing procedures and techniques.

�.
-SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY/EDWARDSVILLE, ILLINO.I St
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INFORMATION SERVICE

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