Issue Contents
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1 | Untitled | East side of Men's Gymnasium; photo. |
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2 | Education is big business, graduates told | Thomas C. McCracken addresses ninety students at March Commencement; description of ceremony; twenty-six students receive bachelor's degrees with remainder receiving diplomas; list of students; photo. |
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3 | Seerley Foundation grows | Organized by alumni in 1926, Foundation serves many. |
4 | Students ring Central Bell | Student pranksters ring bell to celebrate basketball victory. |
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5 | June Commencement program | Program of activities; Alumni Association secretary urges attendance. |
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6 | Business needs women | Alumna Louise B. Moyer outlines need for women in banking in article in professional journal. |
7 | Extension worker honored | A. C. Fuller elected president of Teachers College Extension Association. |
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8 | Thirty-five compete in debates this year | Debate results for the year and roster of participants. |
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9 | Debate trip through Missouri | Results of road trip with a look at the subjects under consideration. |
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10 | Bertha Martin memorial benefit play | Will present Tolstoy's "Redemption". |
11 | Commercial alumni meet | Alumni meet for dinner in connection with commercial teachers meeting; roster of those attending. |
12 | High school dramatic conference planned | English Department planning discussions, short illustrative plays. |
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13 | Men win scholastic honors | Three men, no women, make perfect scores for fall term. |
14 | School desk bells disappear | Electric bells are replacing hand bells and belfry bells. |
15 | Shield Club awards honors | Nine women initiated into physical education honorary society. |
16 | Students join national federation | Wendell Bragonier attends conference of National Student Federation. |
17 | Winter Purple Pen distributed | Work of twenty-six students represented. |
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18 | Cecilians present concert | Present 42nd annual concert. |
19 | Drama class produces play | Class produces "Dr. Knock". |
20 | Red Oak is branch school site | Because of economic conditions, two of three summer schools will be eliminated. |
21 | Sir Philip Ben Greet | Presents "Hamlet" and "Twelfth Night". |
22 | Tau Sigma Delta | Finishes first in Tutor Ticklers; earns about $500 for student loan fund. |
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23 | Baseball trophies awarded | Baseball and track MVPs honored. |
24 | High schools debate at college | Will compete for scholarships, medals, and trophies. |
25 | Margretta Kerr | Alumna presents concert at college. |
26 | Professors to be hosts | Will host state AAUP meeting. |
27 | Student presidents banqueted | President Latham honors and addresses student leaders. |
28 | Xanhos win intramurals | Xanho wins championships in basketball and wrestling. |
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29 | College trains coaches of the future | Need for school physical education personnel; college has good equipment, facilities, staff; benefits of studying at ISTC; photo. |
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30 | Cagers awarded letters | Nine men win letters in basketball. |
31 | Relays continued | After consideration of recent rulings, Teachers College Relays will be held after all. |
32 | Wrestler is honor student | James Luker places sixth in scholarship among men students. |
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33 | Thin-clad drill for grueling track season | Track and field season preview. |
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34 | Sophomores predominate on '31 nine | 1931 baseball season preview; 1931 schedule of games; photo. |
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35 | Cagers win nine of twelve games | 1930-1931 basketball season wrap-up; freshmen won both games in which they played; photo. |
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36 | Frosh cagers clean slate | Freshman basketball team defeated both opponents in 1931 season; photo. |
37 | Gridders receive sweaters | Twenty-one members of the football team win sweaters with letters. |
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38 | Three wrestlers go to national meet | Season wrap-up; photo. |
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39 | Nighthawks | Intramural basketball team pulls pranks; photo. |
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40 | Annual dates are released | Boy Scout Day will be October 24; Dad's Day will be October 31; Homecoming will be November 7. |
41 | Evening and Sunday classes | Extension Service will offer classes especially for teachers who have not completed their college work. |
42 | This issue: athletics | Explains theme of this issue. |
43 | Wanted! Good students | ISTC is looking for strong students; asks alumni to urge good students to attend the college. |
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44 | A. W. Moore | Elected to the superintendency of the Glidden Schools to succeed Glen B. Yearous. Moore was formerly superintendent at both Oelwein and West Union. |
45 | Alvin L. Swanson | Head of the Industrial Arts Department in the high school at Billings, Montana. He married Mabelle Kreamier, of Mt. Ayr, Iowa, in December 1929. |
46 | Arlene Stoner | Accepted a position as athletic director in a nursing school at St. Louis, Missouri, where she will reside. She had previously taught physical education for three years in Newton, Iowa. |
47 | Carl Herrman | Head of the Athletic Department at Hampshire, Illinois; plans to continue work on his master's degree at the University of Illinois. |
48 | Carmen Corse | Recently certified by the Civil Service Commission of Chicago; attended the National Mississippi River Waterway and Flood Control Convention in Chicago as a representative of that city. He married Louise Hanlon in November. |
49 | Fred C. Gilchrist | Attended the caucus of the Republican members of the House in Washington, D. C., in February. He is representative-elect of the tenth district of Iowa. |
50 | H. B. Carroll and Lew McDonald | H. B. Carroll, merchant of Bloomfield, Iowa, and Lew McDonald, lawyer at Cherokee, Iowa, were appointed to the State Senate Committee on Public Schools. |
51 | Hjalmar Ostergaard | Re-elected superintendent of schools of Bloomfield, Iowa, early in January. |
52 | J. A. Woodruff | Member of the Extension Department at Iowa State College at Ames; was off duty recently on account of illness. He has returned to his work. |
53 | Marion Jay | Teaching French and biology in a high school in Superior, Wisconsin. Last year she taught English in the Methodist Memorial School at Chateau Thierry. |
54 | Mrs. C. H. Palm | The former Judith Chase is now residing in Circleville, Ohio, where she and her husband have three children, Jean, Joan, and Richard. |
55 | Mrs. Frank W. Byrnes | The former Hazel Webster, librarian at the State Teachers College at Mayville, North Dakota, spoke on "The Student Centered Library" at a meeting of the American Library Association in Chicago in December. |
56 | Mrs. R. H. Jensen | The former Margaret Hicks graduated from the Nursing Course in the University Hospital at Iowa City, where she currently resides. |
57 | Mrs. U. S. Vance, Jr. | The former Adelaide B. Ebert now lives at Oakdale Avenue, Akron, Ohio. |
58 | Philip L. Shutt | Planning to attend the Western Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois, to study for the Episcopal ministry. He has been local editor of the Independence Conservative, weekly newspaper of Independence, Iowa. |
59 | Raymond Bushgens | Head of the Mechanical Drawing Department at Miami, Florida. |
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60 | Arthur S. Gist | President-elect of the Humboldt State Teachers College, Arcata, California; inducted into office March 20, 1931. He has a distinguished record as an educator at Seattle in public school work in connection with San Francisco State College. |
61 | C. F. Perrott | Principal of the Union High School at Ceres, California. Four of the eight students ranking highest in scholastic honors, as announced recently in the Modesto Collegian, are graduates of the school of which Mr. Perrott is principal. |
62 | Don Moore | The son of Hon. E. R. Moore and wife, the former Minnie V. Wynkoop, has been elected manager of the "All Story Weekly" in New York; has been an instructor in the English Department in one of the high schools of Miami, Florida. |
63 | Dr. Alexander C. Roberts | President of the San Francisco Teachers College, recently delivered two addresses which were published in the Sierra Educational News. His wife recently visited her mother, formerly Bertha M. Auld (James Fields) at Victoria. |
64 | Earl Bell | Has been appointed as instructor in anthropology at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln. |
65 | Ida M. Cline | Sent a complimentary copy of her new music composition, "The Sun Always Shines in the Blue." She was missionary teacher in the Girls' High School at Merut, U. P. India, and studied at the University of Iowa. |
66 | Iola B. Quigley | Has written several articles appearing in the January issue of "The Palimpsest" a magazine of the State Historical Society at Iowa City, Iowa. |
67 | Leo Ranney | President of the Oil Mining Company at New York City, Ranney and his brother in California were called to Waterloo, Iowa, the middle of January due to the death of their father. Mrs. Ranney will reside in California the rest of the winter. |
68 | Maybelle H. Brown | Head of the Physical Education Department of the Lend-A-Hand Club, Davenport, Iowa. She was formerly a member of the Physical Education Department of the Y. W. C. A. at Nashville, Tennessee. |
69 | Mrs. Floyd Reed | The former Dorothy Hammond, formerly a kindergarten supervisor at the College, now resides in Topeka, Kansas. |
70 | Mrs. Paul Leech | The former Irma Waymack graduated from a teachers college in Alabama and until her marriage, taught near Florence, Alabama, where she and her husband reside. |
71 | Mrs. Pearl G. Cruise | Recently made a tour of the country observing work in the teacher-training schools in the United States. She also observed work in Winnetka schools and in the schools of Kansas City, Kansas. |
72 | W. Claude Jarnagin | Elected Lieutenant Governor in charge of Division Number 4 of that organization at the annual meeting of trustees of the Nebraska-Iowa District. He is a newspaper publisher of Storm Lake, Iowa, and a charter member of the Des Moines Kiwanis. |
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73 | Alfred D. Sabin | Bringing about many changes in the Manual Arts Department of the Bedford High School. Four new courses have been added including wood-turning, architectural drawing, art-metal work, and sheet-metal work. |
74 | Eva L. Gregg | Former member of the English Department of the College is now a resident of Long Beach, California. |
75 | Helen Zilk | Now teaching at Temple City, California. She taught for eight years in the Mason City schools, and in 1925 completed a course in the Illinois College of Photography at Effingham, Illinois. |
76 | Howard O. Hollin | Now assistant director of Teacher Training and supervisor of mathematics at the State Normal School at Lewiston, Idaho. |
77 | John Glenn | John Glenn is a working with the United States Weather Bureau in Wichita, Kansas, in connection with the municipal airport. |
78 | Le Claire H. Eells | Appointed as an instructor in business and finance at Notre Dame University. He completed a course of study at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. |
79 | Lew McDonald | Now a senator in the Iowa General Assembly; visited a few former members of the College faculty. |
80 | Lewis G. Hersey | Now with the Bankers Life Insurance Company of Des Moines. He is the son of Professor S. F. Hersey of Cedar Falls. |
81 | Mrs. Frank M. Dutton | The former Mary E. Lovitt of Scottsbluff, Nebraska, is principal of one of the schools of the Scottsbluff School District. This is her sixth year there. |
82 | Mrs. J. D. Funk | The former E. Pearl Anderson was re-elected County Superintendent of Schools of Routt County, Colorado. Of her six children, the eldest is attending the Colorado Woman's College at Denver. |
83 | Mrs. R. F. Skiff | The former Josephine Carlon is now residing with her sister, Emily C. Dodge, at Fallon, Nevada. While in California last October, she visited Jennie Hughey Wheeler, Minnie Moore Gray, and Eleanor Kraiger Meacham. |
84 | Mrs. William S. Baird | The former Ruth Jeffers is now residing in Cedar Falls, Iowa. Her husband is general agent of an Oil Supply Company and has charge of several stations in nearby towns. |
85 | S. T. Neveln | Re-elected superintendent of schools at Austin, Minnesota. An article in the Austin paper states, "He has demonstrated himself as an executive of rare judgment in school matters and won the acclaim of educators as well as taxpayers." |
86 | Zilla E. Dillon | Now in Ft. Defiance, Arizona, where she teaches kindergarten in the largest Indian Agency in the United States. She entered the United States Indian Service last September. |
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87 | C. Williamina Jongewaard | Principal of the Women's Industrial School of the American Arcot Mission, Palmaner, Chittoor District, South India, expects to leave India in April and journey to the United States by way of China and Japan, arriving here in June. |
88 | Cap E. Miller | Professor of agricultural economics at North Dakota; delivered an address in January before the Thirty-third Annual Farm and Home Week at the University of Illinois at Urbana. |
89 | Dr. Fred C. Sage | Eye, ear, nose, and throat specialist at San Pedro, California. He is president of the Methodist Episcopal Church Choir, and a member of the Apollo Glee Club which presented a concert in San Pedro recently. |
90 | Earl H. Bell | Accepted a position as instructor in sociology and anthropology at the University of Nebraska. |
91 | Elizabeth Warttman | Awarded a master of arts degree from the University of Iowa in February. At present she is an instructor in the school at Harlan, Iowa. |
92 | Everett Ludley | Now teaching in the public schools at Hawarden, Iowa; acting as faculty advisor of the Hawarden High Times, weekly newspaper published by the students of the high school. |
93 | H. A. Mueller | Elected secretary of the Model Lodge, No. 315, of A. F. & A. M. in a joint installation at the Masonic Hall at St. Charles, Iowa. Mr. Mueller was also elected secretary of the Red Cross Association of that city. |
94 | Katherine Farrell | Appointed to the position of Guidance Counselor in a grade school of Akron, Ohio. She now assumes her new duties in addition to her regular teaching work in a grade school with an enrollment of 1500 pupils. |
95 | Marion E. Seater | The daughter of James A. Seater, of Northwood, Iowa, married Leslie Weieneth, of Kensett, Iowa. They will reside near Kensett. |
96 | Mary J. Boland | The daughter of Thomas Boland, of Fairfax, Iowa, has accepted a position as teacher of music at Aurora, Illinois. At the College, she had been a member of the College Symphony Orchestra, the Cecilian Glee Club, and the Neo Chresto Literary Society. |
97 | Mrs. A. N. Ries | The former Irene Lakings is now living at Lengby, Minnesota, where her husband has accepted the cashiership of the Farmers' State Bank. They formerly lived at Couderay, Wisconsin. |
98 | Mrs. C. M. Wyth | The former Stella M. Kingsbury is now living in Los Angeles, California. She and her husband were former residents of Santa Monica. |
99 | Mrs. Donald MacFarlane | The former Cora A. Learned of Glendale, California, recently returned from a tour of Europe in which she visited England, Scotland, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, and France. |
100 | Mrs. Glenn Enloe | The former Dorothy Freeburg and husband celebrated their first wedding anniversary in September 1930. They currently reside in Cedar Falls. She is president of the Kappa Phi Alumnae Association. |
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101 | Albert Barrett | Was a member of the Sir Philip Ben Greek Players, is now a prominent actor in New York City. |
102 | Charles F. Johnson | Superintendent of Luzerne County Industrial School for Boys at Kis-Lyn, Pennsylvania; recognized as a highly capable educator and executive in the community he serves. |
103 | Elsie Christoffersen | The daughter of Hans J. Christoffersen, of Cedar Falls, Iowa, married Thomas A. Parrott, son of J. S. Parrott, of Waterloo, Iowa. Elsie was a member of Delta Phi Delta sorority. Thomas is now employed by the National Life of Vermont Insurance Company. |
104 | George Freshwaters | Alfreida Cottando and George Freshwaters married in November. She is a music instructor in the High School at Washington, Iowa. George is athletic instructor at Washington. |
105 | Gertrude Morrison | Gertrude Morrison, of Wellman, Iowa, married Robert Stephens, of Ainsworth, Iowa. She is an instructor in the schools of Ainsworth, Iowa. |
106 | Julia Bockenthien | Julia Bockenthien married Walter Hohl in June 1930. They will reside in Hinsdale, Wisconsin, where Julia is employed as supervisor in the school there. Walter is a salesman. |
107 | Lila Bockenthien | Lila Bockenthien married Emmett Murphy in June 1930. They will reside in Chicago, where he is employed as an accountant for the Commonwealth Edison Company. |
108 | Mrs. Johnson | The former Myrtle Boardman, and husband Charles, have two boys, Charles F. Jr., a student at Princeton University, and Lawrence Boardman, a senior in Wyoming Seminary, a preparatory school at Kingston, Pennsylvania. |
109 | Mrs. Noah W. Gibson | The former Lillie M. Britten is now instructor of science and mathematics in the St. George School for Girls, in Chicago, Illinois. She also teaches during the summer at the camp for girls at Eagle Lake, Wisconsin. |
110 | Pauline E. Bruene | The daughter of Marie Bruene, of Gladbrook, Iowa, married Ora Seydel, son of C. W. Seydel, of Sigourney, Iowa. Pauline has taught in the schools of Gladbrook, Garner, and Green Mountain, Iowa. They will make their home on a farm near Dysart, Iowa. |
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111 | Bessie Gamet | The daughter of W. D. Gamet, of Mondamin, Iowa, married Clayton Ulrich, son of James Ulrich, of Cedar Falls, Iowa. She has taught in the schools of Mondamin, Pisgah, Sutherland, Corwith, and Latimer, Iowa. They are residing on a farm near Cedar Falls. |
112 | Elizabeth Hart | The daughter of Professor I. H. Hart, Cedar Falls, Iowa, married Dr. John C. Bennett, who is serving his internship at the Presbyterian Hospital in Chicago. |
113 | Elva M. Robinson | The daughter of George Robinson, of Independence, Iowa, married Clavis H. Adams, son of J. L. Adams, Mabelville, Arkansas, on December 25, 1930. Clavis is instructor in the Junior College at Coffeyville, Kansas, where the couple will reside. |
114 | Genevieve Hays | The daughter of Professor William E. Hays, of Cedar Falls, Iowa, married Walter Emmett Peck, son of Walter D. Peck, of New Haven, Connecticut in December 1930. They are both at the State Teachers College at Springfield, Missouri, in the music department. |
115 | Marie Lichty | The daughter of H. F. Lichty, of Eagle Center, Iowa, married Leonard S. Miller, son of W. M. Miller, of Dunkerton, Iowa, in February 1931. They will reside on a farm near Dunkerton. |
116 | Mildred Sloan | The daughter of A. B. Sloan, of Sterling, Illinois, married Richard R. Gibson, son of A. E. Gibson, of Waterloo, Iowa, on December 25, 1930. Richard is now district salesman for the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation in Waterloo, where they will reside. |
117 | Minerva Burton | The daughter of W. A. Burton, of Waterloo, Iowa, married Frank D. Riley, of Clarion, Iowa, in October 1930. Frank is an attorney at Clarion, where they reside. Minerva has taught in the Clarion High School. |
118 | Sadie Weiler | The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Weiler, of Reinbeck, Iowa, married Clarence Mawdsley, son of J. R. Mawdsley, of Algona, Iowa, in December 1930. He is manager of the Farmers' Grain & Lumber Company at Irvington, Iowa. They will reside near Algona. |
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119 | Avis Newbury | The daughter of F. I. Newbury, of Allison, Iowa married Carl Evans Meehan, son of B. Meehan, of Dumont, Iowa. Avis was English and Dramatics teacher at Swea City, Iowa, for one year, and at Liscomb, Iowa, for the past two years. |
120 | Daisy Howard and Leonard I. Gashel | Daisy Howard married Leonard I. Gashel, of Chicago, Illinois. Leonard is employed in the Auditing Department of the International Cellucotton Products Company at Chicago, where the couple will reside. |
121 | David E. Bates | Marguerite Finch, of Twin Falls, Idaho, married David E. Bates at Pasadena, California. They will reside in Cedar Falls, Iowa. |
122 | Estella Weimer | Estella Weimer, of Audubon, Iowa, married Sam T. Manuel. Sam is principal of the Audubon High School, in which city the couple will reside. |
123 | Hilda L. Eason | Hilda L. Eason, of Orange, City, Iowa, married the Reverend Bert Van Zyl, of Holland, Nebraska, in December 1930. Hilda has been teaching in Orange City for the past five and a half years. They will reside in Holland. |
124 | Hildegarde Bohlke | The daughter of Bernard Bohlke, of Remsen, Iowa, married Otto J. Raveling, of Remsen, where they will reside. |
125 | Leta Duffus | Leta Duffus married William L. Schoales. She taught in the schools of Newton, Iowa, and the past two years in the Montezuma, Iowa schools. They will reside on a farm near Montezuma. |
126 | Mary Rundles | Mary Rundles, of Janesville, Iowa, married William Grupp, also of Janesville. Mary has taught in the high schools of Eddyville, Whitten, West Union, and Independence, Iowa. They will reside on a farm near Janesville. |
127 | Mrs. Ethel Richardson | Mrs. Ethel Richardson married George W. Phillips, of Oskaloosa. They will reside in Oskaloosa, where he is engaged in business. |
128 | Mrs. J. C. Koppenol | The former Emelia Eason is taking Hilda Eason's place as teacher in Orange City for the remainder of the year. She came from Kentucky, where she and her husband, J. C. Koppenol, have been doing missionary work among the mountain people. |
129 | Vern J. Tansey | Lois Shirley, daughter of Edith Shirley, of Waterloo, Iowa, married Vern J. Tansey, son of H. W. Tansey, of Faribault, Minnesota. Vern has served as principal of the McKinley School at Waterloo for the past three years. |
130 | Verna Nelson | The daughter of Albert Nelson, of Waterloo, Iowa, married Harland M. Snydegard, son of Peter Snydegard, of Royal, Iowa. They will reside on a farm near Royal. |
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131 | Clarice Randall and Glenn R. Hoffman | Clarice Randall married Glenn R. Hoffman in June 1930. She taught the second grade at Winfield, Iowa, for the last year. Glen is manual arts instructor at Mount Pleasant, Iowa, where they will reside. |
132 | Crystal P. Madison | Crystal P. Madison, of Salix, Iowa, married J. Herbert Jones, of Oakland, California. Crystal has been first grade teacher at Sergeant Bluff, Iowa, for the past six years. He is associated with the Eastman Kodak Company of San Francisco. |
133 | Ila Hildreth | The daughter of S. C. Hildreth, of Windom, Minnesota, married Arthur Hawkins, of Windom. Ila has been teaching at Dike and Greene, Iowa, for the past six years. Arthur is a superintendent of the White Eagle Service Stations in the St. Paul Division. |
134 | Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Buckles | The former Irene C. Lawler, and husband, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, announce the birth of a son, James, born at Fort Dodge, Iowa. |
135 | Mr. and Mrs. Carl Edmonds | The former Marie Siddall, and husband Carl, of Laurens, Iowa, announce the birth of a son, Darrell Carl. |
136 | Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Holman | The former Mary L. Gilchrist, and husband Howard, of Clarksville, Iowa, announce the birth of a daughter, Sara Ann. |
137 | Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Kearns | The former Viola Bockenthien and husband J. T., of Benton, Wisconsin, announce the birth of a daughter, Pauline Louise, and a son, Paul John, born March 1930. |
138 | Mr. and Mrs. Jay Duvall | The former Dora M. Robbins, and husband Jay, of Roswell, New Mexico, announce the birth of a son, Stanton Scott. |
139 | Mr. and Mrs. John Origer | The former Margaret Buttemore, and husband John, of Bode, Iowa, announce the birth of a daughter, Mary Jane. |
140 | Mr. and Mrs. Leo H. Oswald | The former Lola B. Wakeman, and husband Leo, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, announce the birth of a daughter, Joan Rita. |
141 | Mr. and Mrs. Otto B. Kayser | The former Vera Macy, and husband Otto, of Clifton, Arizona, announce the birth of a daughter, Mary Jane. Otto is a teacher in the Clifton High School. |
142 | Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Betz | The former Bessie Troutner, and husband Paul, of Sioux City, Iowa, announce the birth of a girl, Barbara Anne. |
143 | Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Pember | The former Margaret Demuth, and husband, of Kalispell, Montana, announce the birth of a son, Robert Arthur. |
144 | Mr. and Mrs. Rae S. Asher | The former Helen Linch, and husband Rae, of Clarksville, Iowa, announce the birth of a son, James Joseph. |
145 | Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Dykhouse | The former Hollis Snyder, and husband T. A., of Iowa Falls, Iowa, announce the arrival of a daughter, Virginia Ann. |
146 | Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Bohan | The former Helen Barnes, and husband, of Shell Rock, Iowa, announce the birth of a son, Thomas James. |
147 | Mr. and Mrs. Walter Marsh | The former Doris Knoop, and husband Walter, of Greene, Iowa, announce the birth of a son, Donovan. |
148 | Myrtle Buss | Myrtle Buss married George M. Bates in March 1930. She has taught third grade at Coin, Iowa. They will reside in Red Oak, Iowa. |
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149 | Albert M. Fields, Mrs. James Clayton, Mrs. Percy I. Burroughs | Albert M. Fields, of Seattle, Washington, died early in December. He was in the real estate business. He is survived by two sisters, Isabella F. Clayton, of Seattle, and Violette Burroughs of Seattle. He was the son of Charles F. Fields. |
150 | Alice Rohr | Alice Rohr died on December 22, 1930, from injuries received in an automobile accident. This was her second year as an instructor in Latin and coach of girls athletic activities, in the high school at Arlington, Iowa. |
151 | General E. C. Bellows | Bellows, who died recently, attended the Iowa State Normal School, in 1877, one year after it was founded. He was born at Janesville, Wisconsin, May 8, 1856. In 1918, he was appointed Commissioner of Corporations for the State of California. |
152 | Jessie F. Lias, Mrs. R. D. Rogers | Mrs. Agnes W. Lias, mother of Jessie F. Lias, and the former Mabel C. Lias, died January 19, 1931, at her home near Payette, Idaho. |
153 | Josephine B. Knott | Charles C. Ford, husband of the former Josephine B. Knott, of Carlsbad, New Mexico, died December 10, 1930. Josephine is teaching in the grades in Carlsbad. |
154 | Milton H. Hoffman | Milton Hoffman, died at Eldridge, Iowa, on February 1, 1931. He was county agricultural agent at Eldridge. |
155 | Mrs. Milton Stafford | The former Margaret Hale died at her home near Urbana, Iowa, on November 21, 1930. She is survived by her husband, Milton, and a daughter, Marjorie Ann. |
156 | Mrs. Roy S. Whitney | The former Pearl W. Coombs died following an operation for appendicitis in October 1930. She is survived by her husband, a son, and a daughter. |
157 | Mrs. W. A. McAllister | The former Hilda Paukner, of Macomb, Illinois, died January 2, 1931. She is survived by her husband, who is an instructor in history at the Western Illinois State Teachers College, and an infant daughter. |
158 | Viola Hamler | Phyllis Jean Vogt, daughter of Ervin Vogt and the former Viola Hamler, of Melbourne, Iowa, died at State Center, Iowa, December 1, 1930, of bronchial pneumonia. |
159 | Zoe Eulalia Harmon | Mr. L. L. Wright, husband of the former Zoe Eulalia Harmon, of Bedford, Iowa, died in January, 1931. He was superintendent of schools at Bedford. He is survived by his wife and a daughter, Joy. |
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160 | Clara Large | Clara Large, of Pasadena, California, died January 23, 1931, and was buried at DeWitt, Iowa, her former home. She taught for many years in the schools of Iowa. She also taught summer sessions in the Teachers College Mathematics Department. |
161 | Emma M. Rait | Emma Rait, of Tucson, Arizona, died February 19, 1931. She is survived by four sisters: Mrs. Walter Hutton of Des Moines; Mrs. R. S. Blossom, Algona; Margaret Rait, of Cedar Falls, and Grace Rait, supervising critic in teaching at the College. |
162 | Frank R. Willis | Judge Frank Willis, of Los Angeles, California, died at age 75, on February 12, 1931, following a lingering illness. He had presided over departments of the Superior Court for eighteen years, ending his service in 1926. |
163 | Lillian Goodwin Peck | Harry Byran Peck, of Coram, Montana, died at Kalispell, Montana, on March 1, after an illness of three weeks with pneumonia. He was the husband of Lillian Goodwin Peck, who was financial secretary of the Teachers College before her marriage in 1915. |
164 | Linnnie Schloeman | Linnie Schloeman, died at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, February 5, 1931. She is survived by a brother, Henry, of Norway, and a sister, Mrs. Milton Towner, of Chicago. She was vice president of the Cedar Rapids Teachers Association. |
165 | Milton H. Hoffman | Milton Hoffman, died at his home in Eldridge, Iowa, February 1, 1931. He is survived by his wife, the former Alta Mathews, one son, Milton Harry Hoffman, Jr., and one daughter, Virginia Mary Hoffman, both at home. |
166 | Mrs. Arthur M. Bean | The former Florence R. Marshall, died January 26, 1931, at her home in Fresno, California. She is survived by a daughter Edith Elizabeth, and her husband, Arthur Bean, professor of biology at the State Agricultural College of Fresno. |
167 | Mrs. J. R. Vaughan | The former Bertha J. Edwards, of Waterloo, Iowa, died after a brief illness December 23, 1930. She is survived by her husband, a son, three sisters, and one brother. She was an accomplished musician and an active worker in the First Baptist Church. |
168 | Professor M. F. Arey | Professor Arey died at his home in Cedar Falls, Friday, March 20, at age 88. He will be remembered by alumni as one of the most lovable and kindly of instructors. |