SUMMER, 1966 r . T " Nv National NAIA hurdles champion B VvV t J-iV;p ' I 8 varsity let,ers in 3 years 1 "TS dAlUiliil.il ' Winner of Booth award J ) J.r1,,--.--- J" jtSSSBk. , J 3.625 GPA ' jjf " "ZT'1 Jmssaea Uj- ' (see Page io BOB BURLES WILLAMETTE ALUMNUSFROM - r THE Frederickson Hall: Raised in 1900, Razed in 1966 Frederickson Hall at 215 Winter St., S.E., the Salem residence of hundreds of independent Willamette students in the 1930s, 1940's and 1950's, before on-campus housing was available for all students was unceremoniously wrecked recently as part of the urban renewal project to make room for the University's expansion. Frederickson Hall lay just to the north of the Truman Wesley Collins Legal Center, now under construction. Frederickson Hall was completed in 1900 and was originally a private sani sanitarium, tarium, named Florence Sanitarium after the wife of the founder, Dr. Rich Richard ard Cartwright, who was the father of Mrs. Brazier C. Small of Salem. Later, the building became a general hospital, known as Willamette Sani Sanitarium. tarium. Upon Dr. Cartwright's death in 1933, the hospital was sold to Joseph Eskelson, father of Mrs. Ernest R. Frederickson of Salem. When Mrs. Frederickson and her husband fell heir to the property, they converted it into a boarding house "Frederickson Hall." Frederickson Hall became a rooming house after World War II, and was sold about 11 years ago to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Yeater of Salem, who contin continued ued to operate it until the building was recenty vacated. ' V. r Fx: i v i i I. 56 of Grads to Continue Studies A survey of 200 Willamette spring graduates in liberal arts and music reveal revealed ed that 112 (56 per cent) of the B.A. recipients planned to continue schooling. In the last 10 years, 52 per cent of the students who received B.A.'s at Wil Willamette lamette have been admitted to graduate and professional schools. New English Instructor Named Herbert A. Seeman, a teaching assist assistant ant in English at Gonzaga, has been ap appointed pointed instructor in English at Wil Willamette lamette University, starting September 1. He holds a B.A. from Gonzaga, and is working toward his M.A. in English at Gonzaga this summer. At Willamette, he will replace Elaine Roddy, who has taken a year's leave of absence to com complete plete work on her doctorate. Robert Chauls Joins Music Faculty Robert Chauls, who will receive his Master of Music degree in piano from University of Michigan this summer, has been appointed to teach piano and music therapy at Willamette. He graduated from Antioch (Ohio) College in 1964. Malone Named Dean-Elect of Law School; Will Succeed Reese in 1968 James L. Malone, assistant dean of the UCLA School of Law, has been appointed dean-elect of the Willamette College of Law, effective July 1, 1967. He will serve one year under Dean Seward P. Reese, and will assume full deanship when Reese retires in 1968. Malone, a Phi Beta Kappa, graduated magna cum laude from Pomona College in 1953, and later studied at New York School of Law and Princeton before go going ing to Stanford University, where he earned his law degree in 1959. Merton R. DeLong dies Merton R. DeLong, L '12, who helped organize Goodwill Industries of Oregon in 1926, and who later served as its president for 25 years, died in Port Portland land June 26 at the age of 77. The Ore Ore-gonian, gonian, which reported receiving many letters and phone calls eulogizing Mr. DeLong, commented in an editorial a few days after his death: "The number of people he helped make a living, to overcome handicaps, to live a satisfying life will never be known. But many of them feel the loss of his death." WILLAMETTE ALUMNUS VOLUME XIV, NUMBER 1 SUMMER, 1966 Published Quarterly for the former students of Willamette University. Second class postage paid at Salem, Oregon. Return postage guaranteed. History instructor named David W. Nowicki, who recently earned a master's degree at University of Wisconsin, will join the Willamette history department this fall as an in instructor structor in general European history, cul cultural tural and intellectual history, and "The world since 1914." He is a graduate of Franklin and Marshall College in Penn Pennsylvania, sylvania, and is a member of Phi Alpha Theta national history honor society. Miss Goeury joins language department Francoise Goeury, a native of France who earned a bachelor of arts in poli political tical science at Willamette in 1964, will return to Willamette this fall as an in instructor structor of French. For the past year, she attended graduate school at the Univer University sity of Nancy in France. While there, she taught English in a secondary school operated by the American Red Cross. 2Deferred Rush Program Dropped Greek living organizations at Wil Willamette lamette will be permitted to pledge freshmen during the fall semester this year. The deferred rush program, which had been in effect at Willamette's six fraternities for three years at the Uni University's versity's five sororities for two years, has been discontinued by action of the Board of Trustees. Under the deferred rush pro program, gram, fraternities and sororities had to wait until the spring semester to pledge freshmen. Music School shares Ford grant for "radically new program" Willamette University is one of 25 music schools in the United States se selected lected by the Contemporary Music Project of the Music Educators National Conference to participate in a program to improve methods of teaching music. Willamette will share with three other Pacific Northwest schools University of Oregon, University of Washington, and Washington State in a $65,000 grant made possible by the Ford Founda Foundation. tion. Charles Bestor, Dean of the Willa Willamette mette College of Music, described the project as a "radically new program" for integrating courses that previously were taught as separate subjects. The Salem School District will co cooperate operate with Willamette in a two-year pilot program to test practical applica application tion of the new theories of teaching music. Gillis studies in New York Prof. Richard Gillis, head of the Willa Willamette mette University economics department, was in New York for three weeks this summer on an all-expense-paid study sponsored by the American Securities In Industry. dustry. Prof. Gillis was one of 25 econo economists mists selected nationally to participate in the study of financial markets. The study included visits to the New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock Ex Exchange, change, and various commodity markets. Dr. Gillis devoted most of his time to studying the computerized methods in stock forecasting, for incorporation in his Willamette class of econometrics, an advanced economy theory course. Bergland to Replace Montgomery Albert C. Bergland, who will receive his Master's degree in geology at Oregon State University this summer, will join the faculty at Willamette this fall as an instructor in earth science. He is a grad graduate uate of University of Redlands. At Wil Willamette, lamette, he will succeed Dr. Richard Montgomery, who resigned to accept a position at Fresno State University. 5T-. . Alfred M. Fedje, Willamette alumnus, appointed as director of admissions Alfred M. Fedje, a 1950 graduate of Willamette, has been appointed director of admissions of Willamette University. He began his duties August 1. Fedje had been with the Portland school system since 1953, having served as a teacher and activities director at Franklin High School; as a teacher, counselor, athletic director and assistant to the vice-principal at Jefferson High School; and for the past four years with the administrative staff of the district, where he was engaged primarily in the selection and employment of teachers in the high school division. After graduating from Willamette, Fedje taught two years at Newberg High School, then went to Southern Methodist University, where he earned his master's degree in 1953. Fedje's wife (Polly Pollock) gradua graduated ted from Willamette in 1950. Fedje succeeds Richard Rohrer as dir director ector of admissions. Rohrer left in July to serve as a counselor at American High School in Manila. 12 Summer Programs Attract 1,600 Visitors to Campus The impact of nearly 1,600 visitors for 12 different summer programs has made the University appear far from desolate during the "quiet" summer months. Starting with about 300 delegates to the 114th Oregon Annual Conference of the Methodist Church in early June, the visiting groups have represented religion, government, science, educa education, tion, and professional football. Some 288 high school girls checked in June 11-19 for the 18th Girls' State session at the University for a study of good citizenship and the democratic form of government. While the girls were hoding caucuses, 63 other students started "cram" Ses Sessions sions in the annual six-week summer session and 19 more were meeting with Willamette professors for the Coe In Institute stitute of American Studies for high school teachers, also a six-week session. Youth predominated from June 19 to July 3 when 78 high school girls ar arrived rived for the Junior Engineers' and Scientists' Summer Institute and 82 en enrolled rolled in the coeducational Communica Communication tion Arts and Science Summer Institute. An international flavor was evident when 32 students from Willamette's sister college, the International College of Commerce and Economics near Tokyo, gathered in the Capital City for a whirlwind glimpse of American life, with classroom emphasis on American history, English, government and in in-s s itutions. About 100 high school teachers at attended tended an education workshop July 24 through August 6; a Methodist pastor's school drew another 100 during the second week of August, followed by two other church programs, the Northwest International Mission Conference and the Methodist Men Assembly. Science division receives grant The National Science Foundation has given an $11,640 grant to Willamette University for use at the discretion of the University's science division. Dr. G. Herbert Smith, University President, said the science departments will submit pro proposals posals for use of the funds, and a com committee mittee of the science faculty will decide on the eventual use. Two previous grants of this nature were used for special re research search programs and scientific equipment at Willamette. Alumni Elects Officers Larry Standifer, '54, Eugene, was named president-elect of the Willamette Alumni Association in an election con conducted ducted by mail. He will assume the office of president two years from now. Meanwhile, Eugene Lowe, '49, Salem, will serve as president. Lowe was chosen as president-elect in 1964. Other officers elected in the recent balloting are: Nadine Orcutt Nunn, '42, Salem, secretary; Beverly Briggs Cross, '49, Salem, director of the Alumni As Association. sociation. Edwin S. McWain, '41, San Francisco, and Walter Commons, '37, Springfield, were elected as Alumni As Association sociation representatives on the Board of Trustees. 3Commencement speaker explains: Why Business Must Have A Steady Flow of Liberal Arts Graduates . . an idealistic young person can find no field of service today in which human values must be more respected as of paramount importance than in the operation and management of an American business." Mr. President, Trustees, Members of the Faculty, Members of the Class of 1966 the 124th Class of Willamette Uni University, versity, Reverend Sir, Ladies and Gentlemen: College graduates today certainly have a multiple and wonderous choice in selecting a career. This American world of ours is characterized, as you know, by turmoil, still increas increasing ing economic growth, an expanding role of government and exploding knowledge in many vital areas. In this era of diffli diffli-cult cult multiple choice, businessmen are more and more concern concerned ed that substantial numbers of you, faculties and students, seem to have a relatively poor opinion of business, particularly big business. Roger Blough, the Chairman of the United States Steel Corporation, in a thoughtful article which appears in the January-February issue of the HARVARD BUSINESS RE REVIEW, VIEW, said, "The evidence . . . indicates that the world of business enjoys less than unalloyed prestige among those on the campus who regard themselves as the intellectual elite and who would seek acclaim among their fellow intellectuals." Today, I hope to submit persuasive evidence that business businessmen men and business institutions are not in fact utterly pre preoccupied occupied with materialistic considerations; that they are not absorbed only with dollar profits; and that on the contrary, they find in business the fulfillment of instinctive high ideals. There are, I believe, basic reasons why many of us hold adverse opinions about business. In the first place, the times in which we live surely do foster doubts, cynicism, possibly des despair, pair, certainly confusion. I don't wonder that students are confused, I know I am: bitter poverty rubbing elbows with affluence; the ghastly, persistent, pervading fear of . nuclear war; the jeopardy to the world of the awesome nuclear force under the control of the untutored and the unrighteous; the religious ethic in conflict sometimes with the marketplace; the concern that the increasing knowledge on all fronts is not directed to public good but to its exploitation. It is also true that the students of America today are edu educated cated to have doubts and to express them. And that of course is very wholesome and very valuable. The inquiring and bold mind is a great asset and incidentally, the kind of mind that is especially valuable in business. Finally, many people do not realize and understand the cur current rent philosophy of business. What is it that large and growing areas of enlightened business truly seeks and wants? It is this lack of understanding of the philosophy of business which I would like to discuss with you today. I want to share with you some of the characteristics of business which constitute, in my judgment, proof that business is worthy of a higher opinion on the campuses of the land. i i ' 1 i 4 I i i JAMES F. OATES, JR. President and Chairman of the Board, e Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S. Reprinted here is the text of the ad address dress delivered by Mr. Oates to 253 Willamette University graduates at the University's 124th annual commence commencement ment ceremony this Spring. Mr. Oates is a graduate of Princeton University, and now serves that dis distinctive tinctive institution as its President of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Oates is also a graduate of Northwestern University Law School. He is a director of several of the na nation's tion's largest and most influential com companies, panies, including the New York Tele Telephone phone Co., Great Northern Railway, the Case Manhattan Bank, the First Na National tional Bank of Chicago, and the Brook Brooklyn lyn Union Gas Company. 4First off, I readily confirm that business is concerned with dollar profits and will necessarily continue to be so. I mean long term continuing profits, not the quick buck of the fly-by-night operator. I confirm too, that organization and specifi specifically cally business structure is here to stay. There simply isn't any other way to run things in a world where the population is rapidly approaching three billion people, who must be fed, housed, clothed, educated, transported and allowed to satisfy their legitimate material, intellectual and spiritual needs. The solemn fact is that the efficient operation of business for the greatest good of the greatest number is essential in our way of life. There is a direct and vital mutual inter-dependence between business and the basic democratic processes "Business knows now that civilization perishes when individuals or business entreprises lose concern for the welfare of all." that characterize our system of government. Every enlightened businessman knows that American society must enjoy even higher standards of health and education. It must safeguard political and religious freedom and must provide opportunity and equality to the poor and to minorities. More than this, the businessman realizes that business must play an important part in bringing about these objectives. Admittedly, the busi businessman's nessman's recognition of these conclusions, as hardheaded business truths, is of comparatively recent origin. I confess that one of the great thrills and satisfactions of my life has been to see this change, and live in it and to a degree partici participate pate in it. I remember very distinctly that in 1948 when I moved from a law office to Peoples Gas in Chicago, the prevailing point of view of business leaders was that they could not even permit a business corporation to give financial support to educational institutions because that would be "giving away the stock stockholders' holders' money." True, there were some men who suggested the contrary: Irving Olds, Frank Abrams, Clarence Randall, Deveraux Josephs, just to mention a few. But that original atti attitude tude has completely changed. George Champion, Chairman of The Chase Manhattan Bank in New York, speaking about priviate enterprise and public responsibility in a free economy, recently said at Rutgers University, "The distincton which business makes between capital investment and social invest investment ment is much more a difference of degree than kind." Today, almost all businessmen recognize that their business cannot succeed and prosper unless corporations support finan financially cially and by deed and act, the philanthropic institutions of the land. In a survey recently described in NEWSWEEK maga magazine, zine, college students were actually reported to believe that business has outgrown its old goals of making profits, turning out goods and contributing to prosperity. Now they want business to move on to a new and broader set of social goals. Business knows now that civilization perishes when individ individuals uals or business enterpries lose concern for the welfare of all. To succeed long term business must be prepared to continually fulfill its social function and businessmen today know that, believe me! Now as I have indicated this business point of view and philosophy is not fully or generally understood; there are many who simply refuse to believe it even when they are told. Per Perhaps haps the situation is something like that of a boy who came home from Sunday school and had a chat with one of his best friends his grandmother who asked the seven year old youngster what he had learned. And he said they had told the story of the Israelites crossing the Red Sea. The grandmother said "That's very interesting. Tell me about it. What did they tell you?" "Well, Grandma," he said, "old Moses got out his walkie-talkie and he called up all the captains and squadron leaders and asked them to come in their jeeps to the Red Sea right away. He got a hold of the Seabees and told them to put across a pontoon bridge. They built the bridge and the Israel Israelites ites went across and then old Moses he called on his walkie walkie-talkie talkie and he told the Seabees to blow up the pontoon bridge. And he put mines under the bridge and they blew it up just when the Egyptians were coming after them and the Egyptians all drowned in the sea." The grandmother asked "Is that what they told you?" The boy said, "Of course not, Grandma, but if I told you what they told me you wouldn't believe it!" Let me illustrate by a few examples, the variety of absorb absorbing ing interests you will surely find in business today and its direct involvement with people. I would like to use our ex experience perience at the Equitable not only to advertise my employer, but also because I know more about its affairs than I do of other enterprises. Pie tse consider for just a moment the impli implications cations of the simultaneous tasks faced by business manage management. ment. These tasks are to simultaneously serve the best interest of employees, owners, and the public, including customers, to the satisfaction of each group. An illustration; we have in the Equitable, as is true I suppose in all large business organizations, the anxious, nagging prob problem lem of the marginal employee, the man or woman who has worked for the company year after year after year and is still a good distance from retirement but who has become com comparatively paratively non-productive for a variety of reasons. In terms of the right of other employees and in terms of our responsibility '. . . We are aivake notv and running . . . to conserve our policyholder's money, probably also in terms of our responsibility for being fair to the employee himself, it is wrong to automatically continue that person in employment. Consider the thought and effort and care which must go into the diagnosis of the problems of these people and in o the search for places for them, where they can be happy and pro productive, ductive, either in or outside of the company. Or take the oft discussed matter of the introduction of automation. At the Equitable we have revolutionized our work processes by the application of electronic data processing machines and we have eliminated hundreds of low level repetitive jobs. How docs one reconcile with the human values the hard-headed competi competitive tive pressures that force this technological change and speci specifically fically where it concerns the individuals wlio.se jobs disappear? I doubt if any insurance company has proceeded further with electronic data processing than we have yet we have guaran guaranteed teed continued employment for all our people affected and we have made good on that pledge one way or another. One final example. What has business done to help solve the most difficult and most explosive problem our country faces the problem of a fair deal for minority groups? Well, for a considerable time business joined the rest of the com community, munity, closed its eyes and dragged its feet. But we are awake 5now and running. At least a very important segment of busi business ness can now be thus characterized. Big company after big company, and Equitable, thank God among the first, has joined Plans for Progress, a program run by business itself under the sponsorship of the President's Committee on Equal Employ Employment ment Opportunity. Under Plans for Progress we pledged our ourselves selves that employment, and in fact all decisions that affect a person's job, will be based on job skill, experience, perform performance, ance, education and training. No quotas will be set in select selecting ing members of particular racial or religious groups. These instances will, I hope, have proved to you that an idealistic young person can find no field of service today in which human values must be more respected as of paramount importance than in the operation and management of an American business. There is one principle of employer-employee relations that transcends every other. And that is that the managers must have in their gizzards a sincere respect for the individual human rights of every employee in fact for every person whether employee, customer or a member of the community at large. The enlightened businessman knows that if genuine respect for each individual human can capture an organization the effect is far-flung and the strength of the business greatly enhanced. More than that, he knows that such respect is in fact a moral imperative. Take another area that I am sure is of concern and interest to you research. It became quite clear to us at the Equitable some years ago that we must establish a continuing program of fundamental basic research to help us understand the prin principles ciples upon which our life insurance business is based and thus better serve the public and our policyholders. Accordingly, a basic research operation in the social science was begun at the Equitable and is now led by an eminent scientist, who formerly was chairman of the sociology department of a major university and is now a vice president of the Equitable Dr. John W. Riley, Jr. This amalgamation of scholarship and business has been exciting to watch and most productive to all participants. Dr. Riley's office of social research produces and interprets social science knowledge relevant to Equitable affairs in these broad fields of study: communication, demo demography, graphy, human motivation, organization theory, income distri distribution, bution, together with family employment and relationships. "A few characteristics of the liberally educated graduate reveal how important he is to business for practical business reasons." It has been suggested from time to time that business is not really interested in liberal arts graduates whose education has not been highly specialized that it wants only technicians and scientists. That would be like saying that the Equitable wants only actuaries. We need far more than actuaries to run an insurance business. We need people to sell insurance, provide service, pay claims, invest funds, etc. The actuary does provide the scientific backbone of a life insurance business and every enterprise must have, in my judgment, the essential discipline of a scientific backbone. It is important both for us and for you to understand why business must have a steady flow of liberal arts students from colleges and from liberal arts graduate schools. A few charac characteristics teristics of the liberally educated graduate reveal how import ant he is to business for practical business reasons. Indeed, these characteristics could perhaps be described as subtle qualifications for business success. First, there is the ability to pick assistants to whom you can confidently delegate vital responsibility. It has been some sometimes times said, with quite a lot of truth in it, that the first qualification of a busines executive is to persuade another fellow to do his job better than he can do it himself. That's another way of saying that delegation is essential. The heart of effective delegation lies in the understanding of how others think and how others not like yourself think. The power to think and to understand the thinking of others, developed by a study of the liberal disciplines under trained scholars, is at the very heart of liberal education and it is likewise the fundamental basis of business success. A second characteristic of high quality business leadership is the capacity to distinguish between the important and the unimportant every hour, every day, every week, every year. And that's an exacting task. That takes an awful lot of capa capacity. city. Many mistakes have to be made before that capacity is developed. Every business career consists of an endless series of questions to be answered and problems to be solved. There are two steps to the answer to every question. The historical step is first. What are the facts? Not the facts as you think . . the successful practice of business means fundamentally the selection, the development, the inspiration and the advancement of men of high principle." they are or wish they were, hope they are or even as they perhaps ought to be No. What are the facts? And secondly there is the philosophical step. What are the criteria of value that you are going to use in reaching a judgment upon those facts. What are your standards of values? Who is your God? Now you can't take a book off the shelf and find satisfactory standards or continuing criteria of value. There is no magic formula. It isn't written in any book. And there are no stand standards ards of what is always true, right, just and beautiful. Every man must develop his own measurement tool, and his own criteria of values on the basis of his education, his environ environment, ment, his spiritual convictions and his own daily experience. One develops his own standards by personally finding and using them. It is, however, well recognized that liberal educa education tion leads the student inexorably to a study and understanding of those high principles and accepted standards which have guided men and upon which men have acted throughout the ages. The third subtle qualification for business success is the development of the capacity to differentiate between principle and expedience. This makes use of the scale of values to which I have just referred. This is the ability to apply values through action. One cannot and must never compromise with principle. But in business the point is to make principle useful to make it work to make it bring forth its fruits in due season. Busi Business ness must produce products, not reports. It must choose be between tween alternatives, not merely describe them. Business must use principle as a sanction for action and not as an excuse for avoiding action. In this sense, business does make principle expedient. (Continued on page twelve) 6Even If You Can't Hear, Let's Talk By Philip A. Shaw, '52 Philip A. Shaw, '52, describes his experiences at the National University of Ireland in Dublin, which has one of three departments in the British Isles for training teachers of the deaf. In its associ association ation convent deaf school, girls from all over Ire Ireland land are in residence. In answer to an article in a Dublin, Ireland newspaper, criticizing television's usefulness to the deaf, a 16 year-old Irish deaf girl wrote to the editor: "We who are deaf have much enjoyment from television. We can enjoy rhythm as we see it in dance and music pro programs. grams. We can enjoy the drama, especially when the plot is summarized and written out in the TV guide. We can keep up on the filmed news, though we admit that the announcers don't speak with lip movements as clear as we are used to in our classroom." The writer of this letter is stone deaf. Some of her class classmates mates have a less serious hearing impairment; they can hear their names if spoken close to their ear. New hope for these children is afforded by electronics. Because of improvements in hearing aid equipment, one of our pupils said, "I have forgotten I am deaf." We who are taking a post-graduate course of specialized training at the National University of Ireland in Dublin have had the opportunity to see some of the most advanced techniques that electronics has made available. In the photo on this page, you see a miniature screen on which a sound appears as a squiggly line or circle. This per permits mits the deaf child to "see" his own utterances on the screen. An "N" sound, for example, appears as a big circle with a little circle inside. "Language above all." This, in essence, is the purpose of deaf education. Because language is complex, the teachers must have immense patience with the students. More action is required of the teacher than in teaching children with normal hearing. Field trips are a vital part of the curriculum. By visiting factories and major industries, the student's visual memory is built up, preparing him for understanding of new words related to what he has observed on the field trips. The constant relation of experience with word, picture with word, dramatic action with word, is the slow but continuous process by which those once called "deaf and dumb" are pre prepared pared for a normal life. Lip-reading is still the mainstay of education for the young deaf. Pupils who learn to read lips are better able to take on employment and adapt to social contacts among people with normal hearing. However, some children do not have the academic ability to read lips. For these children, we concentrate on teaching the use of hand-signs to communicate with each other. These students form mental images of words as manual or muscular impressions rather than as sounds. Is lip-reading really so difficult that many students cannot mas:er it? Yes, it is. To illustrate the difficulty of learning lip-reading, try this experiment yourself: Turn down the TV during the news and try to understand what the announcer is saying and remember a deaf child's vocabulary is much more limited than yours. Interestingly, children seem to grasp lip-reading faster than adults. Even children with normal hearing seem to study and "read" their parents' faces. Deaf education is an extension of this fundamental observation. Our language is built on a complex of experience and words and their subtle interconnections. Despite the phonetic in incongruities congruities of our language, the sounds, which have never been heard by severely impaired children, are somehow learn learned, ed, phoneme by phoneme, diphthong by diphthong, word by word, one colloquial expression on top of another. It is a miracle that they learn at all. To learn sounds they have never heard is the ironic task of the deaf. They also must learn that normal hearing persons, who outnumber the deaf about 200 to 1, may not understand their problem. As hearing persons, we need to think about the piece of advice given to a group of graduates from our school for the deaf: "Most hearing people don't have enough patience. So you have to have patience. You have the advantage: You know their problem, but they don't know yours." K-r iy.- ' &' '-4 i .FT &:? ':f' ':f'-1 1 fw J .... I" ; r ;: 'a Vi vLy-.' V:r"5",,Di nlri in rill .1 i.i. 111 mini 11 - 11, - ,,1 j Phil Shaw uses an oscilloscope articulation trainer in an Irish school for deaf girls. Electronic devices such as this are giving new hope to children with hearing impairments. 7A BIRD'S EYE VIEW OF THE The drawing on these two pages shows how the Willamette campus will look in 1972, upon completion of the FEE-125 program. "FEE" stands for Fund for Educa Educational tional Excellence. The "125" has double significance: 1) Willamette reaches its 125th year this fall; 2) the cost of the development and expansion program is 12.5 million dollars. There will be but few and short pauses in construction activity between now and 1972. At times, building craftsmen will outnumber the professors :n campus. Three major construction projects are under way this summer: The Tru Truman man Wesley Collins Eegal Center; the addition to the women's residence, Doney Hall; and the expansion of the library. The Doney Hall project should be ready by the start of second semester. The other two projects are scheduled for completion in April. In anticipation of the completion of the Legal Center, the Willamette Law School has admitted a class of 125 first-year students for the Fall term, swelling the Law School enrollment to about 250. The previous record of 190 was set in 1964-65. This means the old Law School faci facilities lities will be more crowded than ever for a few months. However, the stu students dents will be more than repaid for their inconvenience when they move into the spacious Collins Legal Center, which is designed to accommodate 300 students. In addition to the major construc construction tion projects, there are a number of comparatively minor renovation and improvements taking shape throughout the campus this Summer. They include: Waller Hall New linoleum floors on all three floors in classrooms and offices. The cupola is being repaired. Eaton Hall Repairs to cupola and general painting. Old section of the library New cir circulation culation desk, and reorganization in some of the side rooms. Baxter Hall New flooring on all stair wells. New carpeting in dining rooms. New mail room with combination-lock boxes. I IU ! UL I in fcL 'IU UL J bj ry lmr I jii (" MILL STREET i ' fflr yrn irff 1 " j tm I iWn recrrrrcn If ) yjl I lJff pllfp- SAT - S TREE f-- ---jf fn 1 Economics-Political Science 2 Baxter (men's residence) 3 Phi Delta Theta 4 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 5 Beta Theta Pi 6 Sigma Chi 7 Kappa Sigma 8 Delta Tau Delta 9 Matthews (men's residence) A Library addition EXISTING BUILDINGS 10 Belknap (upper class men) 11 Library 12 Eaton (administration and liberal arts) 13 Waller (chapel and liberal arts) 14 Everell S. Collins (science) 15 College of Music 16 Lausanne (women's residence) 17 Doney (women's residence) ltt Auditorium hine Arts NEW BUILDINGS completion date April 1967 B Doney addition C Truman W. Collins Legal Center 19 Bishop Health Center 20 Gymnasium 21 Maintenance shops 22 York House (upper class women) 23 Lee House (upper class women) 24 Alpha Phi 25 Pi Beta Phi 26 Chi Omega FUTURE CONSTRUCTION D Delta Gamma E Alpha Chi Omega F University Center and men's residence G Graduate School of Administration H Field House J Residence units for law students K Chapel 1) 8 1WILLAMETTE CAMPUS IN 1972 lj yr ia ill E L L E V U E I STREET x y 11 Jsjj&-g-"-"'-"" U yRAYM OND B. ROGERS -Del. POffG ON STAT E C A PTTOL l( 9Track Coach Chuck Bowles Brings Winning Ways To Willamette Coach Bowie Lewis and Clark College has been the habitual Northwest Conference track champion the past few years, but the Pio Pioneers neers ran into a more powerful habit this season . . . that held by Willamette track coach Chuck Bowles. The crew-cut topped, stop-watch carrying Bowles came to Willamette this past year after leading the University of Oregon Frosh teams to four straight undefeated seasons. His winning habit suffered one blemish in dual meets this season, but when his Bearcat spikers annexed the NWC track crown his image was restored and the complexion of league's track face began to take on a rugged Bearcat look. Bowles inherited some fine, young talent from Ted Ogdahl when he took over the track job, and a sprinkling of new newcomers comers was added to give the Bearcats a well balanced team. How well balanced was determined in the season finale when the good depth returned Willamette to the throne room for the first time since 1961. Lewis and Clark was after an unprecedented fifth straight title, but the championship standings showed the Bearcats with 85 points, followed by LC, 78V; Whitman, 75; Linfield, 354; Pacific, 29; Pacific Lutheran, 16; and College of Idaho, 4. The title was no real surprise to Bowles, who scrutinizes times and distances like a bus dispatcher. "Things were favor favorable able all through the season," he reasoned. "Our times and dis distances tances were good in dual meets, and by performing up to ability I knew we had a good chance for the crown." Math instructor Steve Prothero got his first taste of coach coaching ing when he took over the golf team. The linksmen posted a 10-4-1 dual match record and finished second in the league behind Whitman. Earlier in the year the 'Cats won the col college lege division of the Statesman-Journal Golf Tournament. Professor Emeritus Lestle Sparks stepped off the tennis courts often enough himself to guide the Bearcat tennis team for his 40th year to an 8-6 match record and third place finish in the NWC behind Whitman and Lewis and Clark. John Lewis' baseballers hit the ball better than any team he has had in 19 years, finishing with a team average of .288, but fielding miscues allowed in 50 unearned runs on the sea season son and the Bearcats settled for a fourth place finish. They were 9-8 in league games and 15-11 overall. League champion Linfield went on to win the national championship. Bob Buries: Gentleman, Scholar, Athlete Acclamation can be in the form of loud applause and vigor vigorous ous shouting, or through the unexpressed feeling of confidence by others and the grip of a solid handshake. Robert E. Buries can count all of these gratifying forms of acclamation along with the numerous honors and awards he received while performing as a Willamette athlete the past three years. Whether it was patrolling the defensive football line or thundering over track hurdles, the 6-3, 210-pound Bearcat performed in All-American fashion. And from the comments of his coaches, lie was as much an All-American off the play playing ing field as on it. Track coach Chuck Bowles, who has coached various teams for 20 years, said that "Bob is certainly one of the most out outstanding standing men I've ever been associated with and I consider it a tremendous opportunity to have been able to work with a person of his quality." Football coach Ted Ogdahl knows Bob as a "fierce com competitor, petitor, a terrific worker and truly an outstanding person." Buries, a Marshfield High School product in Coos Bay, chose Willamette after a year at the University of Oregon. Thus, Bob had just three years of eligibility left when he arrived, and he used all three in football and track. During the winter he varied his interests, lettering once in basketball, another time in wrestling and this past year assisting the junior varsity basketball team. The past two years as a gridder he made all-star teams on the conference, district, coast, and national levels; as a hurdler, he finished fourth, second and first respectively the past three years in the grueling 440-yard intermediate hurdle races of the NAIA national meet, setting records in the conference and district along the way. In addition to running the hurdles for Bowles in dual meets, Bob picked up points in the shot put, discus, 440-yard dash and mile relay team . . . amassing a total of 109 points person personally ally in seven meets. He was game captain in football and his track teammates thought that a secret ballot selection of a captain was ridicu ridiculous. lous. He won by lockerroom acclamation. His selection as recipient of the University's Henry Booth award also came as no surprise, for he was adjudged the Bearcat who "in addi addition tion to maintaining high scholarship standing, has exerted a fine moral influence and has achieved the best standing in athletics." Bob, one of the few small college athletes to be considered for the Hayward Athlete-of-the-Year award in Oregon, was approached by various professional football teams. However, he has accepted a grant for graduate study in physical therapy at Stanford University in the fall, yet another form of acclama acclamation tion for an outstanding Willamette student-athlete. 10Bearcats Schedule Five Home Football Games, All on Saturday Afternoons If Willamette football drills take on a National Football League flavor this fall it will be because head coach Ted Ogdahl was busy rubbing shoulders with the Pittsburgh Steel Steel-ers ers during their stay on campus Aug. 13-23. The Steelers booked University facilities during that time to encamp close to the site of two exhibition games in Port Portland land the 13 th and 20 th against the San Francisco 49ers and the Minnesota Vikings. McCulloch Stadium turf will have a week to heal before Ogdahl and his new assistant Joe Schaffeld take roll call for the start of the University's 72nd grid season. Some 21 lettermen return to provide the nucleus for what is anticipated to be another strong Bearcat team. Last fall the 'Cats achieved national ranking while compiling a 6-1-1 rec record ord and landed two gridders on the Little Ail-American team, defensive standouts Bruce Anderson and Bob Buries. Ogdahl will have to find replacements for both Buries and Anderson along with 1 1 other veterans, but with a good list of returnees and newcomers to go along with the lettermen, he will face the nine-game schedule with some confidence. He allows, however, that "we've got one of the toughest schedules ever," a yearly moan from the veteran mentor. The Bearcats have five home games, all Saturday afternoon en encounters, counters, three to start the season and two to end it. The first two opponents, Eastern Washington State and the University of Nevada, are pre-season picks to win the Ever Evergreen green Conference and the Far Western Conference respective- -1 I Coach Ogdahl ly, while a third non-league game Oct. 29 is with highly toured Whitworth College. Season tickets for the five home games are available through the University's business office at considerable savings. 1966 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE September 17 ..... . Eastern Washington State College, 2 p.m. September 24 University of Nevada, 2 p.m. October 1 College of Idaho, 2 p.m. October 8 at Whitman College, 8 p.m. October 15 . . ..... at Pacific University, 1:30 p.m. October 22 at Lewis & Clark College, 1:30 p.m. October 29 ..... -- .... at Whitworth College, 1:30 p.m. November 5 ..... I. infield College, 2 p.m. November 12 . Pacific Lutheran (Homecoming), 1:30 p.m. Northwest Conference games ! I Wo President Smith Reaches 125th Milestone Literally While Willamette University is on the threshold of its 125th anniversary celebration, its President, Dr. G. Herbert Smith, has reached another significant milestone. Dr. Smith has just completed his 125th mile as a jogger. He jogs for more than a mile each morning near his home on Fairmont Hill in Salem. Dr. Smith took up jogging on the advice of his doctor and Chuck Bowles, Willamette track coach. "My doctor suggested I get more exercise," Dr. Smith explained, "and Chuck Bow Bowles les recommended jogging." Bowles, who worked with Bill Bowerman, University of Oregon track coach, is establishing the jogging program that started in Eugene and has swept across the country, firmly believes that jogging can make nearly anyone feel better. He conducted a jogging clinic at McCulloch Stadium last fall. 11Why Liberal Arts Graduates? (Continued from page six) Let me illustrate from my own business experience as a utility executive. There came a day in a large northern city when it was realized that the people could not have their homes economically heated with gas unless in some way we were able to bring vast stores of gas to the market during the warmer months when the supply greatly exceeded the demand and store it conveniently, near the market for use during the winter months of higher demand. The engineers and geologists assured us that in a nearby geological structure, a dome, we could store millions and millions of cubic feet of gas by pumping the gas down against the salt water sands and pushing back the water, thereby holding the gas in the dome. Thus the application of engineering principles to our problem gave us a green light, but there was no way we could know whether that structure would really hold gas until we actually tried it. And there was no way to try it just a little. We had spent millions of dollars drilling wells and install installing ing plant and mighty pumps and introducing into the dome billions of cubic feet of gas. We were given faith and courage to do so, by wise and mature men who trusted principle and asserted that the need of the public was so great that we dared not refuse to take the risk even at the risk of our own jobs and future. It is interesting to note that the senior member of the board who prevailed with that point of view was characterized at his memorial services by a university chancellor as a man who read James Joyce and a corporate balance sheet "with equal comprehension and complete recall." Now what does this all prove? 1 submit that it shows that the successful practice of business means fundamentally the selection, the development, the inspiration and the advance advancement ment of men of high principle men with a broad enough view to make a success of the enterprise and of themselves, and also to successfully perform service acceptable to the public in the matters entrusted to their care. In other words, any misapprehension on the part of the liberal arts graduate that as a businessman he would have no opportunities to grapple with and contribute to the solution of socially significant problems is based on a false and limited view of business. Within 25 to 50 years society is going to bear little resemblance to the society you people have grown up in, let alone to the one people my age have known. The need for brilliant people and especially for moral people in business is already great and this need is increasing at a pace that makes denying business its share of liberal arts graduates a very serious matter indeed. For some years members of the academic community and businessmen have talked about the necessity of a bridge a two way bridge between us for our mutual enrichment and development. There has been a lot of traffic on the bridge in recent years. I pray God that it will continue and in mounting intensity. We've got to keep this traffic going because it is the avenue through which the scholars can obtain a realistic view and a true understanding of the world of actions and decisions the world where principles and values must be applied and tested. And it is the avenue through which the businessman can be continuously stimulated and challenged to question his principles and his values, and to offer his experience for research and for inquiry. Moreover, it is over this bridge that our most precious resource, our future executives and managers, you, will come to us. Many of you I trust are now on that bridge heading in our direction. We need you. We will be better because of you and you will help us to serve our fellow man more fully. Thank you very much and God bless you all. CLASS NOTES '10 CYNTHIA HORNIBROOK BOW BOW-DEN DEN writes that she continues busy in the Walla Walla Toastmis Toastmis-tress tress Club and sells an occasional original poem. She resides at 104 S. Paiouse St., Walla Walla, Wash Washington. ington. '16 DR. CHARLES C. HALL is a re retired tired M.D. and is living at 1147 Oakmont Dr., Wainut Creek, Cali California. fornia. '20 MYRTLE WALMSLEY retired on April 1, 1966, alter serving lor 30 years in the mission tield. She is now an official visitor for Im Im-manuel manuel Church. Her address is 3919 Grand NE, Albuquerque, New Mexico. '21 ALICE WELCH MARSTON has retired from teaching at Lincoln High School in Portland, Oregon. She is now living at the Columbia Manor Nursing Home at 1610 S.W. Shattuck Rd., Portland, Oregon. INA MOORE POTTER, 1433 E. 56th St., Long Beach, California, has recently retired from teaching and is now leaving on a two months trip to Europe. DR. PAUL DAY is on the staff of the National Science Founda Foundation, tion, in charge of Foundation grants for heart research. He was previously a scientist with the Food and Drugs Administration, and prior to that head of the De Department partment of Chemistry of the Medical School at the University of Arkansas. He served on Presi President dent Eisenhower's "Heart Com Committee." mittee." His wife is the former MILDRED GARRETT. '23 DR. TRACY E. STREVEY has become a pro.iect specialist in the Ford Foundation's international division. His assignment with the Ford Foundation will take him to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, as Vice President of Haiie Sellassie I University in charge of all acade academic mic and educational programs for the next two years. Dr. Strevey has been vice president for Aca Academic demic Affairs at the University of Southern California. DR. BRUCE WHITE, who recently retired as Dean of Faculty at the University of Hawaii, will leave this fall for Iran where he will serve during the coming year as consultant on administration at the University if Tehran under a Fulbright-Hays lectureship. He will be accomanied by Mrs. White (GRACE BRAPINERD) . '25 MARGARET LEGGE GRIFFITH lives in Shreveport, La. at 2619 E Cavett. Her daughter, Claire, son-in-law, and three grandsons live nearby. Margaret writes that her hobby of art is paying off and she has won several awards lately. JUANITA HENRY MOLL writes that she and her husband find plenty to do since his retirement. She enjoys her work as substitute teacher for Rcnton and they are both readers for the Christian Science Church in Kent. Address is 18835 106th SE, Renton, Wash Washington. ington. '26 The class held its reunion on May 21, 1966 and new officers were elected. Harold Fearing (504 3rd Ave., Aberdeen, Washington), was elected President. Mrs. Charles Brechtel (Lucile Wylie) was elect elected ed Secretary. Her address is Rt. 2, Box 99, Eugene, Oregon. Mr. & Mrs. IRL HALLIDAY (NOMA TERRIL '27) reside at 208 Manor Drive, South San Fran Francisco, cisco, California. Irl's business is construction. MARJORIE CHRISTENSON KING, 1625 Gates St Eureka, California is a teacher at Eureka Senior High School. Her son, Lewis, has been at Willamette University for three years. ANN SILVER ALLEE has been appointed as Executive Director of the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology Inc. Among her many qualifications for this position were her long and thorough familiarity with analyti analytical cal psychology, teaching and long executive experience with the YWCA in Montreal. Her new ad address dress is 112 East 19th St., New York, N.Y. '28 HELEN SANDE TRUBER, 8 Winsor Ave., Berkeley, California, is still enjoying her work as Li Librarian brarian at Merritt College of the Peralta J.D. District of Alameda County, California. Since the death of her husband, George Rigby '28, VIRGINIA CRITES RIGBY has moved from Honolulu, Hawaii back to Wil Wilmington, mington, Delaware. After she sells her home, she plans to keep her headquarters in Wilmington and spend winters in Honolulu and California. '30 WILLIAM W. MUMFORD is being sent to Munich, Germany, Sept. 5-15 as a U.S. Delegate to the XV General Assembly of the U. R.S.I. International Radio Scientific Union. His wife, Betty, will accompany him and they will have a few weeks vacation in Europe. Their address is 4 Cray Cray-don don St. Morris Plains, N.J. '31 CURTIS FRENCH has been ap appointed pointed superintendent-principal of the Modoc Union High School in Alturas, California. He has been principal of the Pescadero High School for the past six years. Congresswoman EDITH STARRETT GREEN who is chairman of the House Special Sub Subcommittee committee on Edu Education, cation, received the honorary degree Doctor of Laws from Miami Uni Uni-i7rc;ifv i7rc;ifv at its an- Wrf-! nual commence ment exercises. Mrs. Green de delivered livered the commencement ad address dress at each of two programs. '34 Mr. & Mrs. HERBERT HARDY (ELOISE WHITE '32) had an in interesting teresting trip last fall traveling in Europe for two months by car with their son, Jonathan, who had been at Stanford in Italy for six months. Their address is 2830 S.E. Moreland, Portland, Oregon. fr t-j '35 Mr. & Mrs. DAVID E. MOSFR (Margaret Notson '33) live at 321 Proctor Dr., Columbia, Mo. Mar Margaret garet has been appointed adminis administrative trative assistant to the Director of the School of Home Economics at the University of Missouri. 12David is associate professor of Agricultural Economics there. DR. FREDERICK P. HARRIS, former director of The American School in Japan, completed 9V2 years of service to this institution in June. He will be visiting pro professor fessor of philosophy at the Uni University versity of Hawaii during the sum summer. mer. This fall, Dr. Harris will join the faculty of Lewis & Clark Col College lege in Portland, Oregon. Mrs. Harris will be traveling through Russia, Scandanavian Countries and Europe this summer with three of their children while two others will be at Camp Minniwan Minniwan-ca ca in Muskegon, Michigan. '36 RUTH JOHNSON WRYN writes that Hawaii is a wonderful place to be. Her cousin, LELIA JOHN JOHNSON SON '19 visited her there last October. Ruth is adult Reference Librarian at Maui Public Library. For two years '56-'58, she was as assistant sistant librarian at Whittier Col College. lege. Her address is 2335 Aupuni St., Wailuku, Hawaii. MYRTLE WETTLAUFER MILL MILLER ER took a new volunteer job as the North Dakota Representative for the U.S. Committee for UNI UNI-CEF. CEF. They had a workshop in New Orleans in March and then spent 3 days in Guatemala visit visiting ing primary schools, hospitals, social centers, health clinics and other UNICEF-aided projects. She has also been in Europe with the North Dakota State University Choir, visiting France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland and Belgium. Her address is 1201 1st St. North, Fargo, North Dakota. '37 REV. OSWALD JEFFERSON has been appointed as Canon Pas Pastor tor at St. Paul's Cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese in Los Angeles, California. For the past 7 years, he has been rector of St. Ambrose Episcopal Church in Claremont. The Jeffersons live at 443 W. 11th St. and have a married daughter and a son. '38 ROBERT S. NELSON is head of the Science Department and is teaching Biology at Parkrose Sen Senior ior High School in Portland, Ore Oregon. gon. He is completing his 20th year at that school. Address is 6037 NE 31st Ave., Portland, Ore. '39 ELIZABETH DOTSON PATA PATA-POFF POFF has been transferred from KOAC, Corvallis, to KOAP-Chan-nel 10, Portland to continue as a TV Producer for Oregon Educa Educational tional Broadcasting. Her new ad address dress is 1820 SE 38th Ave., Port Portland, land, Oregon. Dr. & Mrs. ROBERT A. WILSON (MARGARET MACY) are living at 8130 Flight Ave., Los Angeles, California. Bob is director of the Japanese History Project involved in writing the history of the Japanese in the United States. Margaret is part of the Student Counseling Center at U.C.L.A. She is part of a pilot program train training ing lay people to be counselors at the University. '40 Dr. & Mrs. JOHN S. LAUGH LAUGH-LIN LIN (BARBARA KESTER '43) are living at 102 Brite Ave., Scars Scars-dale, dale, New York. John was recent recently ly appointed a vice-president of the Sloan-Kettering Institute, New York. Mr. & Mrs. ROGER BAKER (ELEANOR PERRY) are now living at 366 Washington St. S.E., Salem, Oregon. Eleanor is a medi medical cal case worker for the Oregon State T.B. Hospital. Roger is a consultant for food processors. Their son, Roger, graduated from the College of Idaho '65; daughter, Anne, attends Western Washing Washington ton State College; and daughter, Barbara, does secretarial work in Washington, D.C. OLIVE CLEMES HERRMAN is an actress and during the summer will be at Garden Center Thea Theater, ter, Vineland, Ontario. Her ad address dress is 2397 Foster Ave., Ventura, California. '42 Mr. & Mrs. J. S. VAN WINKLE (BEULAH BRIGGS '43) reside at 2300 Hillside, West Des Moines, Iowa. Their daughter, Beverly, a junior at Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa, is spending her sec second ond semester studying in England under the "Experiment in Inter International national Living." Beverly has con consistently sistently made the Dean's list and last semester made high honors. '43 MAJ. BARBARA VIESKO is an occup. therapist for the army and stationed at Schofield Barracks, Honolulu. Barbara's home address is 59-569 Ke Iki Rd., Sunset Beach, Hawaii. NORRIS R. JOYCE resides at 775 NE 6th Ave., Hillsboro, Ore Oregon. gon. He is chief investigator for the Oregon State Forestry De Department. partment. '44 DR. RAY E. SHORT, in March '66, received a promotion to full professor at Wisconsin State Uni University. versity. He is head of the Depart Department ment of Sociology with 4 full time and 3 part time department mem members. bers. His address is 365 W. Dewey, Platteville, Wise. '45 BETH NORDEAN CARTER is a housewife and now lives at 6702 SE 29th Ave., Portland, Oregon. JOHN GLASSE is chairman of the Department of Religion at Vassar College. Supported by a grant from the American Council of Learned Societies, he recently did research in Germany. His ad address dress is Vassar College, Pough Pough-keepsie, keepsie, New York. BETTY ADKINS FUKUYAMA was chairman of arrangements for Pacific Northwest Writers Con Conference ference held at Pacific Lutheran University, July 28-30. She is president of the Tacoma Writers Club, Recording Sec, for Tacoma UN. Her address is Box B, Steilacoom, Washington. '48 Dr. & Mrs. CHARLES ZERZAN (JOAN KATHAN) write that they were very happy to once more see the wide open spaces and high mountains of the West. Chuck was promoted to Lt. Colonel. He was serving as chief of medicine at Ft. Gordon, Ga. and had a rather famous ex-President and General as a patient Dwight Eisenhower. When leaving there, he was awarded the army com commendation mendation medal. He is now chief of the department of Gastroen Gastroenterology terology at Fitsimons Hosp. Their address is Fitsimons General Hospital, Denver, Colo. DR. JOHN W. SWARTLY is an M.D. and is now residing at 2405 Anderson, Boise, Idaho. JEAN GIBBONS COUZENS has moved to a new home at 6710 SW 11th Drive, Portland, Oregon. She is still teaching the 4th grade for Portland Public Schools. Her hus husband, band, Jack, is a real estate broker and branch manager for Stan Wiley, Inc. Realtors. ROBERT G. McGEE resides at 2306 18th St., Bettendorf, Iowa, and is business systems analyst for the John Deere Co. He has five children: Ann who is mar married, ried, Bob a senior in high school, John a freshman in high school, Mike 8th grade and Dennis 4th grade. '49 HARRIET NESS DE SERANNO is teaching 1st grade at Eugene Field Elementary School in Sil Sil-verton, verton, Oregon. Her address is 195 Victoria Dr., Salem, Oregon. LT. COL. CHARLES CRECE CRECE-LIUS LIUS was promoted to Lt. Colonel on March 20. He is still serving as chief of the Operational Plans & Programs Division and Directorate of intelligence at Hq. Us Air Forces Southern Command. His address is Albrook AFB, Box 1454, Canal Zone, Panama. HELEN MONTAG PICKETT is enjoying living in Caracas, Ven Ven-zuela. zuela. Her address is Apartado Chacao 11319. GEORGE C. HURT was recently transferred to Paris where he will be assistant General Manager of the B.I.A.O. This bank has branches in 14 Western and Cen Central tral Africa Countries. George has been working in the Brazilian Dis District trict for the past year and a half. His new address is B.I.A.O., 9, Avenue De Messine, Paris 8e, France. '50 DR. RICHARD DRINNON has been named professor of history and chairman of the Department of History at Bucknell University. Dr. Drinnon, who also taught at the University of California and the University of Leeds in Eng England, land, will assume his new posi position tion in September. DR. DALE CLEAVER was re recently cently selected from 280 nomi nominees nees as Outstanding Teacher for 1966 at the University of Tenn. Dr. Cleaver is professor of fine arts, an art history specialist, who recently had published a basic textbook on art history now being used by Univ. Tenn. students. He is spending the summer on a museum visiting trip through the United States and Canada. Ad Address dress is 1425 Kenesaw, Knoxville, Tenn. DR. LESLIE PARROTT who is pastor of the First Nazarene Church in Portland, Ore., will head Cascade College beginning in June. Dr. Parrott will have the title of interim administrator and will continue as the pastor of his church. He lives at 7217 SW 12th, Portland, Oregon. - ... CHARLES J. PATTERSON has W A been elected Vice J j President of Mar- J J ke,Ung ra"d. aDir" u ector of Dole Com- I 4 pany. Dole markets Ji s "; pineapple and V j other canned and I V"wl I frozen fruits. His I I I address is 20783 Luiat4Mk koJ Ashley Way, Sara Saratoga, toga, California. '51 JEANNE duBUY SPAZIANI will be moving to Guam in Aug August ust where her husband, Dick, will join the High School Staff of the Government of Guam School Sys System. tem. They have two sons, Ricky (3) and Marc (1). Their current mailing address is 998 Capitol St. NE, Salem, Oregon. JANET GILLILAND AHRENS has moved into a new home: 6515 Halsey Drive, Downers Grove, 111. Her husband, Bill, is a chemist with Swift & Co. They have two chidren: Carleen (5) and Russell (3). '52 Mr. & Mrs. WALLACE SNYDER (MARY ELLEN PHILLIPS '53) have recently moved to 12 N. Owen, Mt. Prospect, Illinois. Wal Wallace lace is personnel director for War War-shawsky shawsky & Co. Mr. & Mrs. DOUGLAS NICOLL (JANET STARK '51) have moved to 630 Milwaukee Rd., Beloit, Wis Wisconsin. consin. Doug has been promoted to Associate Professor of History at Beloit College. He was also named Acting Chairman of the History Department. '53 ROBERT W. ATKINSON is office engineer for the Gates Rub Rubber ber Co. in South San Francisco and resides at 31 Old Landing Rd., Tiburon, California. JANE FOOSHEE SAN FORD writes that they were transferred in February to Baltimore. Her husband, Bill, is in charge of con construction struction purchasing at Kaiser Aluminum's extrusion plant in Halethorpe, Maryland. It's their fifth transfer in 10 years Spo Spokane, kane, Chicago, Oakland, New Or Orleans leans and now Baltimore. New address is 4723 Bonnie Brae, Pikesville, Md. '54 RICHARD B. BLAKNEY with his wife and three daughters have moved to Kowloon, Hong Kong 11-A Cambridge Rd. He is there as a missionary of the Methodist Church, serving in the position of Planning Officer for a proposed 600 bed interdenominational and international hospital under the Hong Kong Christian Council. The new hospital should be ready in 1969. IDYLL BATES BERGER, her husband and 6 children have moved to Rt. 2, Box 111A, Silver Silver-ton, ton, Oregon. Idyll is teaching. CAPT. WALTER OERDING is leaving for a year in Saigon. His wife, (CHARLEEN ASVIK '54) and family will remain at 3510 Spruce St., Omaha, Nebraska. DONALD E. EMPEY has been named in the 1966 edition of "Outstanding Young Men of America." Empey serves as dir director ector of instructional services for the Arcadia, California Unified School District. He resides at 1760 Alia Oaks, Arcadia, California. DR. JAMES H. HITCHMAN, assistant professor of History at Portland State College, has been awarded $1000 for outstanding teaching during the school year, 65-66. Thirty out of some 300 prof professors essors at the college received these awards that were made available by the Oregon State Legislature, and decided by the students in classes. Jim and his wife MARIE CORNER ('54) re reside side at 980 SW Oak St., Lake Oswego, Oregon. JEAN R. MASTERS (L '54) is a college instructor and has moved to 43-878 Portola, Palm Desert, California. '55 JEAN THOMAS FISHER con continues tinues to work as a computer programmer for General Elcctric's Tempo Operation. She and her husband and young daughter, Jes Jessica, sica, have planned an extended trip for the summer in many parts of the country. Their ad address dress is 6778A Pasado Rd., Goleta, California. DR. & MRS. MARTIN KNITTEL (MARJORIE SWANSON '57) re- 13side at 1804 E. Grant, Corvallis, Oregon. Uhey have a daughter, Kristin, who is a year old. Martin is a microbiologist for Pacific Northwest Water Laboratory. Mr. & Mrs. RAYMON CONDER (SABRA McGOWAN) are living in Marietta, Ga., at 211 Terrydale Dr. Ray is engineer with Lock Lockheed heed Co. They have a new "little one" Mark Raymond, who was born in Feb. MARILYN WITHAM PLATT is a buyer for Frederick & Nelson and her new address is 316 Belle Belle-vue vue E., Seattle, Washington. Rev. & Mrs. WILLIS LUDLOW (ANNE MELLIS '54) are now par parents ents of four children, two new ones added recently. An adopted son, Martin Gregory (1V2) and Wesley Dietrich who was born March 22, 1966. Willis is minister of St. Paul's Methodist church in Idaho Fa", Idaho. Address: 1571 Stranger Dr. KEIlH WRIGHT is with the National Council of Churches and resides at 60 Carleon Ave., Larch Larch-mont. mont. New York. NANCY BRADLEY PETERS spent an interesting ten months working with Project Hope in Guinea, West Africa, last year. She was married in Johannesburg on Sept. 11, 1965 to John Peters, a Danish interior decorator. They plan to return to the States in two years. Their address is 43 Ridge Plaza, 18 Primrose Terr., Johannesburg, So. Africa. '56 DAVID WOOD, 2301 Lynwood St., Bakersfield, California, plans to attend summer school at the University of Colorado and visit his parents in Scotland later. Dave was married last year to Sue Burkhead. FRANK A. MOORE, M.D. will enter his last year of residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of California Medical Center, San Francisco. He resides at 581 Belvedere St., San Fran Francisco, cisco, California. CHARLOTTE STARK HALL is a housewife and lives at 2398 Apo Apo-poe poe St., Pearl City, Hawaii. JOAN LAWSON MIRSEPASY has been in charge of a foreign student speaking program for Clyde Hill School, the only Seattle area school to support a continu continuing ing program of bringing foreign students to the classroom. Also, she is president of an East side mental health center guild and works actively in the East side Conference of Religion and Race. Her husband. Amir, is an engineer for Boeing. They have four child children: ren: Jennifer (8), Juliette (6), Jasmine (5) and Jeffrey (3). Their addrs is 9220 NE 31st, Bel Bel-levue. levue. Wash. Mr. & Mis. GERALD KANGAS (JEANNE BROUGHER '57) are spending 10 weeks vacation visit visiting ing parents and friends in the' USA. Gerald is with the First National City Bank of New York and has spent 3',2 years in Monte Monte-vileo, vileo, Uruguay and a year in Quito, Ecuador. After their home leave, they will be moving to Lima, Peru Jeanne has been busy singing at the radio station "HCJB The Voice of the Andes" and on HCJB-TV. They have two daughters, Kia Lynn (5','2) and Karen Renee (2). New address will be: co First National City Bank, Lima, Peru. RONALD BUTLER is a lawyer and resides at 451 East 55th, Apt. 5, Long Beach, California. DAN DEARBORN now resides at 17422 62nd Ave. W., Lynnwood, Washington. He is a lawyer with the US Air Force at Paine Field, Washington. '57 Dr. & Mrs. ELDON L. ERICK ERICK-SON SON (CAROL HEWITT '56) have recently moved to 3415 Cas Cascade cade Ave., Corvallis, Oregon. After 2 years in the army, Eidon is going into practice with the Corvallis Clinic as a specialist in internal medicine. PETER C. LODER has been ap appointed pointed an instructor in political science next fall at Bucknell Uni University, versity, Lewisburg, Pa. He has been teaching at the University of Pennsylvania on a fellowship while working on his doctorate. RICHARD G. CHRISTOFFER CHRISTOFFER-SON SON is a pharmacist and lives at 1690 19th N.E., Salem, Oregon. Mr. & Mrs. DAVID G. FROST (BARBARA MITCHELL '58) live at 1845 NW 300th, Hillsboro, Ore Oregon. gon. Dave has been awarded the Hillsboro Distinguished Service Award for Outstanding Young Men. Mr. & Mrs. ROBERT I. ELLIS (JOANN CURRY '56) live at 3135 University, Eugene, Oregon. Bob will be starting his third year as a band teacher in the Springfield Public Schools. Jo Ann teaches third grade at Edison School in Eugene. In January, they adopted a baby girl, Sondra Mae. '58 Mr. & Mrs. EDWIN SHAW (GLORIA GREISON '57) live at 1750 Ocean Blvd., Coos Bay, Ore Oregon. gon. Edwin was appointed Dir Director ector of the Coos County Mental Health Clinic. Gloria has a full time job raising their three children: Douglas (5), Stephen (3','2) and Teri (2). Mr. & Mrs. RONALD TAYLOR (CATHERINE LUND '60) reside at 13270 SW Park Way, Beaverton, Oregon. Ron is a banker with First National Bank of Oregon. DR. & MRS. P. TAYLOR (MARGARET DODD) reside in Indianapolis, Ind. at 3800 W. Michigan St. with their 2 sons while Dr. Taylor completes a residency in orthopedic surgery at Ind. Medical Center. ANN LAWSON ROSS recently received a National Institute of Mental Health Traineeship to at attend tend graduate school at the Uni University versity of Washington to study psychiatric and mental health nursing. She has been working part time at Edgecliff Sanitorium in Spokane teaching health edu education. cation. Her husband, David, is an estimator for Boeing. They have 2 children: Lise Ann (3) and Narda Jane (2). New address is 11003 SE 30th, Bellevue, Washing Washington. ton. '59 MARGARET ANN LOWE BEN BEN-STON STON has accepted an assistant professorship in chemistry at Simon Fraser University in Van Vancouver, couver, British Columbia, Can Canada, ada, starting in Sept. She has been teaching at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wise. ROBERT L. KIRK is district manager of ICOA Life Ins. Co. and resides at 2680 Tyler, Eugene, Oregon. He has two girls, LeMay (5) and Marisa (iy2). LT. RUPERT T. NEFF grad graduated uated from Naval Postgraduate School in May, 1966. He received MS in Communications Electron Electronics. ics. Rupert has a daughter who is five years old. New address is Navy Radio Frequency Spectrum tion, 3801 Nebraska Ave. NW, Activity, US Naval Security Sta Sta-Washington, Washington, D.C. CAPT. FREDERICK L. DAVIS is a special security officer sta stationed tioned at Incirlik AB, Turkey. His address is Box 166, TUSLOG, Det 50, APO, N.Y. 09289. RONALD J. LOEW (L) is an attorney for Federal Aviation Agency as Chief-International Law in General Counsel's Office. He resides at 211 Gibbon St., Alexandria, Va. JACK W. HOWAY is a Lt. Com mander in the US Navy in the Ad Admiralty miralty Div., Office of Judge Ad Advocate vocate General, Navy Department, Washington, D.C. His address is 4710 Richmarr Place, Alexandria, Va. '60 SONJA PETERSON BEHRENS is spending the summer in Vic Victoria toria and moving in the fall to Vancouver, B.C., where husband will join Simon Fraser University as a member of the Centre for Communications and the Arts. Mr. & Mrs. JAY CONRAD (CYNTHIA SHAW) live at 935 W. 22nd, Eugene, Oregon. Jay is working for the Family Service Project a division of the anti anti-poverty poverty program. Their third child, Kelly Anne was born last October. JAMES W. LEWIS is accounting manager for Pacific Northwest Bell in Seattle, working with the company's computer operations. Jim, his wife, Helen, and son, Jeffrey, live at 4351 Palatine No., Seattle, Washington. CARL W. GEIST is operations research analyst for Weyerhauser Co. in Tacoma, Washington. He lives at 5138 N. Pearl St., Tacoma. GORDON C. JONES is assistant manager for the Eugene Chamber of Commerce and lives at 1257 W. 6th, No. 11, Eugene, Oregon. FURM M. DUNCAN graduated from the University of Oregon Medical School this June and will intern at the University of Oregon Medical School Hospital and clinics this coming year. His ad address dress is 3130 SW 12th, Portland, Oregon. '61 Mr. & Mrs. MAYNARD SPENCE (BARBARA GREEN '64) live at 1603 Darr St., Apt. 139, Irving, Texas. Maynard is a pilot for Braniff Air Lines in Dallas. SANDRA LINDQUIST WAL WALTON TON lives in Penngrove, Califor California. nia. Her husband is a minister of the Penngrove Community Church. They have one son, Joshua, who is 20 months. SAMMIE BARKER McCOR McCOR-MACK MACK is attending summer ses session sion this year at Willamette Uni University. versity. She will be teaching ad advanced vanced girls' P.E. at Bend High School this fall. This will be a part of an experiment in modu modulated lated scheduling and emphasis on physical skills and fitness pro program gram which is to be set up by September. Her address is 743 East ll'lh, Bend, Oregon. Mr. & Mrs. PHILIP SCHOLLIAN (LINDA KENNEDY '62) live at 1130 Myrtle Dr., Baker, Oregon. Phil is an engineering tech. for the State Highway Dept. and Linda is busy caring for 212 year old, Donald. IRMA PROVORSE JONES is a caseworker for the Multnomah County Welfare and lives at 1806 SW High St., Portland, Oregon. Mr. & Mrs. ROBERT HELLEN HELLEN-THAL THAL (BETTY WILLIAMS '62) reside at 4805 So. Slauson Ave., Culver City, California. Bob is sales representative for the Wey Weyerhaeuser erhaeuser Co. He will spend two months in Tacoma, Washington this summer before being assign assigned ed to an area somewhere in the U.S. By August 30, Bob and Betty with their three boys, David (5), Brian (4) and Andrew (1) will be settled in their new home. BRUCE E. BUZZELL was sep sep-erated erated from active duty with the US Navy on June 4. He is now at attending tending O.C.E. in graduate school. His address is 4381 Kampstra St. SE, Salem, Oregon. MICHAEL L. AUGEE is now living in Clayton, Australia. His new address is Dept. of Zoology, Monash University, Clayton, Vic Victoria, toria, Australia. CAPT. RONALD P. JOHNSON team has entered the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Max Maxwell well AFB, Alabama. C'apt. John Johnson son has previously served as an air police officer at Manzano Base, N.M. He will study communica communicative tive skills, leadership, internation international al relations, duties and responsi responsibilities bilities of the command staff DAVID P. REH REH-FUSS FUSS was recent recently ly sworn in as a Foreign Service Officer of th e United States. The ceremony was held A I at tne Department VA. of State in Wash- 1 (iington- DC- AU I 71 1 Foreign Service ii ' ' Officers are com missioned by the Prerident of the US with the consent of the Sen Senate. ate. He will be assigned to a position in Washington, D.C, or in any of 113 countries with which the United States main maintains tains diplomatic relations. BYRON P. JOHNSON is a stu student dent until Feb. 1, 1967 at the American Institute for Foreign Trade at Phoenix, Arizona. His mailing address is 3018 Hillside Dr., Burlingame, California. BARBARA JACKMAN WOOD WOODWARD WARD is living at 15 Elmwood Ave., Dover, N.H. They have a year old son named David Wood Woodward. ward. DWIGHT P. BILLMAN and his wife, Jenifer, are now completing their third year in Sitka, Alaska; there Dwight teaches at Sheldon Jackson High School. Next year, they will live again in Salem, Oregon, where he will attend Willamette Law School. GARY H. WARDEN is teaching English, Reading and Social Studies to the 7th grade at Ral Ralston ston Intermediate School in Bel Belmont, mont, California. He resides at 1614 Hudson No. 106, Redwood City, California. DR. J. NICHOLAS FAX and his wife, Nancy both graduated from the University of Oregon Medical School in June. They will be doing their internships at Kansas City General Hospital in Kansas City, Mo. His new address is 409 E. 65th, Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA K. LEISETH re received ceived her M.A. in English Lit Literature erature from the University of California at Riverside in June '64. She continued there as a teaching assistant and graduate student working toward her Ph.D. till June '65. This year and next, she is a Lecturer of English at California State College in San Bernardino. Barbara lives at 12902 W. La Cadera, Colton, California. JANEEN HARDY RAMSDEN is a Customer Service Representa Representative tive for the regional office of All Allstate state Insurance Co. and lives at 1490 21st NE, Salem, Oregon. LT. MARVIN CISNEROS has entered the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Max Maxwell well AFB, Ala. He previously served as a personnel officer at Randolph AFB, Texas. At the senior USAF professional school, he will study communicative skills, leadership, and internation international al relations. CAPT. LARRY D. THOMPSON has entered the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Max Maxwell well AFB, Ala. where he will study communicative skills, lead leadership, ership, international relations and duties and responsibilities of the command staff team. Captain Thompson previously served as assistant chief of the weapons sy systems stems support division at Robins AFB, Ga. '62 ROBERT C. SEEGER received his M.D. and M.S. degrees from the University of Oregon Medical 14School in June. He will now take a pedriatric internship at the Uni University versity of Minnesota Hospital. Ad Address dress is 1111 S.W. Gaines, Port Portland, land, Oregon. Mr. & Mrs. PHILLIP L. THOM (MARIAN L. HAUKE) have re recently cently built a new home at 20420 14th Ave NW, Seattle, Washing Washington. ton. WESLEY GREGG MONROE, a Junior in the Drew Theological School was awarded the Clarence Tucker Craig prize for excellence in Biblical studies at the recent Commencement held at Drew Uni University, versity, Madison, N.J. His address is Neshanic Station, New Jersey. JUDITH C. STARR is a student at the University of Oregon studying Spanish during the sum summer. mer. Her present address is 1745 Mill St., Eugene, Oregon. LT. ROBERT J. HISEL will re receive ceive 14 weeks of instruction at the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Maxwell AFB, Ala. He will study communicative skills, leadership, and internation international al relations. He previously served as a navigator at Travis AFB, California. LT. FRERERICK G. DOSHER has entered the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Max Maxwell well AFB, Ala. He previously served as a KC-135 Strato Tank Tanker er pilot at Pease AFB, N.H. '63 LT. RICHARD F. LORD has left Charleston AFB, S.C. where he flew the C-141 jet. He is pres presently ently enroute to Vietnam where he will fly for an Air Commando Sqd. out of Tan Son Naut Fid. near Siagon. His new address will be 4th Air Commando Sq., APO San Francisco, 96307. RAY WHITLOW graduated with a B.D. degree from Drew Theo Theological logical Seminary on May 28. He is currently serving as a Meth Methodist odist pastor in the Clearwater group ministry. His address is Box 424, Orofino, Idaho. LT. PETER A. VERLOOP was promoted to 1Lt. in May while participating in the third largest Airborne Assault Exercise in Europe since WW2 in Bavaria, Germany. Peter married Birgit Sabine Koch on June 3, in Wies Wiesbaden, baden, Germany and honeymoon honeymooned ed in Bavaria, Germany and Vien Vienna, na, Austria. They are living at Bachmayerstrasse 8, Wiesbaden, Germany. LUCY M. BAIRD has just com completed pleted her first year of teaching 6th grade at El Rancho School in Camarillo, California. Last sum summer mer Lucy, under the program Experiment in International Living traveled to Israel and lived and worked as a family member. Her address is 734 18th St., Santa Monica, California. DONALD E. GREEN is a home office underwriter for American Guaranty Life Insurance Co. He lives at 3557 SE Francis, Apt. D., Portland, Oregon. SYLVIA W. SCHUBERT is a teacher of Spanish, English and Social Studies at Leslie Jr. High School in Salem. This summer she is attending NDEA Institute for teachers of Spanish at the University of Hawaii. Her address is 1493 Jordan Dr., S., Salem, Oregon. LT. PHILLIP STEPHEN is pres presently ently serving a one year tour of duty with the US Air Force in Vietnam. MARTHA BOYER MURPHY re recently cently moved to 5112 161st PI. SW, Edmonds, Washington. Her husband, Kevin, was transferred to Seattle. He is Territory Man Manager ager with NCR. They have a young son, Brian, who was born last Dec 28 WAYNE WALKER resides in Medford, Oregon, 1525 Whitman, with his wife and two sons. He is the office manager for Internat International ional Harvester Co. KATHRYN BEATY PASSMORE is a teacher and now lives at 709 Ninth St. SE, Grants Pass, Ore. '64 FREDERICK G. FOGG is now working in the Trust Dept. of Peoples National Bank in Seattle, Washington. Address is 2221 38th PI. E., Seattle, Wash. DOUGLAS C. MOORE has re received ceived an MS degree in Industrial Administration at Carnegie In Institute stitute of Technology. Doug and his wife, (JUDITH JESSEN) live at 2111 Eastlawn Dr., Midland, Michigan. STEPHEN V. CRANE resides at 38 Edwards Ave., Sausalito, Cali California, fornia, and is now with American International Underwriters. CHARLES EISON recently com completed pleted requirements for his MA in Psychology at San Jose State College in California. He is now fulfilling his ROTC commission with the Air Force. When he finishes his training in June at Amarillo AFB, Texas, he and DIANE (COLLINS) will leave for Columbus AFB, Miss. where Chuck has been assigned to Per Personnel. sonnel. Diane has been visiting her family in Oregon but will join Chuck the end of May. JOSEPH D. McCLURE is in flight school for navigators. His new address is: Ens. Joseph Mc Mc-Clure, Clure, BO 2153 - Rm. 107, Naval Air Station, Corpus Christi, Tex Texas. as. ANNABELLE HERBERT GA GA-HAGAN HAGAN is a housewife and stu student dent at Stanford University. Her address is 308 Waverley St., Men Men-lo lo Park, California. DOUGLAS M. BLATCHFORD resides at 12203 SE Hilltop Rd., Milwaukie, Oregon, and is a stu student dent at the University of Oregon Medical School. '65 JEFFREY S. TOPPING has just finished his first year of graduate school at the University of Wis Wisconsin. consin. He will be doing graduate work in Psychology at the Uni University versity of Portland this fall and also working as a teaching assist assistant. ant. He lives at 8980 SW Midea Lane, Portland, Oregon. TOM GLASS is now an instruc instructor tor with the Job Corps, and still attending graduate school in His History tory at Portland State College. His address is Star Route, Box 109, Timber Lake Job Corps Center, Estacada, Oregon. Mr. & Mrs. RICHARD OLMSCH OLMSCH-EID EID (MARADEE OLIVER) are now living at 3130 SW 12th Ave., Portland, Oregon. Dick is attend attending ing the University of Oregon Medical School and Maradee is teaching science at Twality Jun Junior ior High School in Tigard. DOUGLAS H. MOY is working in Portland, Oregon during the summer. He will be attending graduate school at Washington State University in September. Doug was married August 7 to Jan Nelson, a student at Pacific University. His temporary address is 12811 NE Rose Parkway, Port Portland, land, Oregon. CAROLYN BERG lives at 701 NE 42nd St., Seattle, Washington. She is a sociologist for Medical Welfare. BRYON H. DIXON, 2635 Ter Terrace race Dr., Honolulu, Hawaii, is a graduate student at the University of Hawaii in Political Science. Mr. & Mrs. CARL OGDEN (MARY WIRT) live at 1606 Edge Edge-wood wood Dr., Palo Alto, California. Carl is in the Army Engineering Corps and will be attending O.C.S. in Virginia. Mary is in her 5th year of nursing school at Stan Stanford ford University. DENNIS D. RILEY received his MA degree from Syracuse Uni University versity in N.Y. this June. He will begin his doctoral work at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor this fall. He was married last January to Patricia Marx of Dallas, Texas". His current address is 422 S. Crouse, Syracuse, N.Y. STEVEN R. EVANS resides at H-l Kamiak, Pullman, Washing Washington. ton. Steve has a teaching assist, and is working for his MA de degree gree in History. His wife, Bev Beverly, erly, is working towards her BA. They have a young son, Benjamin who was born last September. MARION J. OAKLEY SIMAS now resides at 1915 Mt. Vernon Ct., Apt. 1, Mountain View, Cali California. fornia. Her husband, Joseph, is an electronics engineer employed by Sylvania Electronics. Marion plans to continue her education this fall at San Jose State College. Frances Mckinley now works as a Pesticide Technician in the Quality Control Laboratory for Gerber Baby Foods Co. Ad Address dress is Rt. 2, 4209 S. Osborn, Fremont, Michigan. Marriages ANDREA SUE BRISTOL '66 and SAMUEL FRANK NEBEL '66 were married on May 28, 1966 at St. Mark Lutheran Church in Salem, Oregon. The couple will live in Claremont, California where Mr. Nebel will attend Claremont Graduate School. RUTH ELLEN YOUNKER '66 and PHILLIP A. MARSH '66 were married on May 29, 1966 at the First Presbyterian Church in Sa Salem, lem, Oregon. VIRGINIA LUTTICKEN '66 was married to WILLIAM HARLEY ALLEN '64 on June 10, 1966 in Christ Episcopal Church in Por Por-tola tola Valley, California. They will reside in Salem, Oregon where Mr. Allen is in his first year of law school at Willamette Univer University. sity. GAIL M. DURHAM '63 was mar married ried recently to Howard W. Pur Purvis vis in the Fauntleroy Community Church, Seattle, Washington. Mr. Purvis is presently studying toward a doctorate in German at the University of Oregon. The couple will move to Eugene, Ore Oregon gon in August. Gail will teach at North Eugene High School. LT. WILLIAM J. KIRCHOFF '66 was married to Carryl Jean Black Blackburn burn on June 12, 1966. The couple will live at Chanute Air Force Base in Illinois. ELINA L. FOX '65 was married to David M. Walker on June 11, 1966 in Lake Oswego, Oregon. In the fall the coule will move to Chicago, 111., where David will attend Northwestern University School of Law and Elina will teach school. GWENDOLYN HUNT '64 and DAVID SCOTT CRANE '62 were married recently at the First Presbyterian Church in Roscburg, Oregon. The couple will make their home in Burlingame, Cali California. fornia. Mr. Crane is with Western Airlines at San Francisco Inter International national Airport and Gwen will be working with the San Francisco Day Treatment Center. ALICE A. DICKIE '64 was mar married ried to Richard H. Ellis on May 27, 1966 in San Francisco, Calif California. ornia. Ilirllis To Rev. & Mrs. HERBERT TA TA-LABERE LABERE '59 (LAUREL RATCLIFF '62) a second son, Andrew Glenn was born on Feb. 9, 1966. He joins his older brother, Mark, who is now 2 years old. Their address is 345 Palmer Ave., Syracuse, N.Y. To Mr. & Mrs. John Dahl (JAN ET ROSCOE '58) a son: Stephen Fielding on April 9, 1966. Address is 310 Jasmine, Denver, Colorado. Mr . & Mrs. John Sobieski ANN MERGLER '57) have a new son, Michael, born on September 10, 1965. He joins Johnny (42) and Anne (3). They live at 1200 S. Pasadena, California. Mr. & Mrs. RONALD TAYLOR '58 (CATHERINE LUND '60) have their second daughter who was born on April 25, 1966. Her name is Megan Elizabeth. The other daughter, Anne Catherine, will be five in June. They are now re residing siding at 13270 SW Park Way, Beaverton, Oregon. To Mr. & Mrs. CARL W. GEIST '60, 5138 N. Pearl St., Tacoma, Washington, a son, Mark Russell, who was born April 25, 1966. To Lt. & Mrs. PHILLIP STEP STEPHEN HEN '63, a son, Christopher Lee, on May 22, 1966 in Sacramento, California. To Rev. & Mrs. RONALD SWANSON '55 in Turlock, Calif California ornia on March 30, 1966, a boy named Christian Todd. Their new address is 4762 North Van Ness Blvd., Fresno, California. Deaths CHARLES SKIDMORE '06 pass passed ed avay on Jan. 13, 1966 in Oak Oakland, land, California. GEORGE NEUNER L '08 died in Lake Oswego, Oregon on May 24, 1966. He was the former Douglas County district attorney and state attorney general. MERTON R. DeLONG L '12 died in Portland, Oregon on June 28, 1966. He was a member of the board of Goodwill Industries for 39 years. SETH AXLEY '15 passed away on March 29, 1966 in Berkeley, California. MABEL ADAIR LOCKWOOD '91 died on June 20, 1966 in Salem, Oregon. REV. ROBERT W. MAULDEN '20 died in Toppenish, Washington on February 19, 1966. JUDGE ARLIE WALKER '18 died of a heart attack in McMinn McMinn-ville, ville, Oregon on May 7, 1966. E. CLIFFORD BERRY '23 pass passed ed away on May 14, 1966 in Moses Lake, Washington. ELENE DOUGLAS NELSON '42 died on May 26, 1966 in Salem, Oregon from injuries received in a car accident. ELWIN V. DOTY '44 died on June 14, 1966 in Salem, Oregon following a heart attack. He had been business manager for the Marion County Health Depart Department. ment. DR. ROBERT H. HOGENSEN '44, a dentist in Corvallis, Ore Oregon, gon, died on May 23, 1966. JOYCE REEVES BEARD '49 died in Portland, Oregon on April 14, 1966. BERWIN F. MURRAY '52 died in Corvallis, Oregon on May 26, 1966. He was assistant professor of music at Oregon State University. BYRON SITTSER '54 died May 17, 1966 in Clallam Bay, Washing Washington ton of a heart attack. He was a teacher and athletic director. He is survived by his wife, LIZ LOV LOVING ING SITTSER '55. HARRY LEWIS L '61 was killed in an air crash at Klamath Falls, Oregon on May 25, 1966. He was assistant Klamath County dis district trict attorney. WILLIS (JACK) BARTLETT '17 died on July 9, 1966 in Brooks, Oregon. Mr. Bartlett was a main maintenance tenance engineer for the State Highway Dept. until his retire retirement ment in 1960. EARL A. NOTT '12 was killed in a car accident on July 11, 1966. He was a Yamhill County DA for 28 years. Until his retirement in 1957, he practiced law in McMinn McMinn-ville, ville, Oregon. 15RETURN PDSTAGE GUARANTEED WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY, SALEM, OREGON 973D1 Two "Don't Miss" Events for Willamette Alumni and Parents a w -moo,9 r-3 K.' . . : p. PARENTS' WEEKEND September 30 - October 1, 1966 HOMECOMING WEEKEND November 11-12 Watch your mailbox. You will receive an invitation giving detailed information and a complete schedule.