Rudolph Daniel Lindquist Director, University School 1932 to 1939 Biographical Sketch Rudolph Daniel Lindquist was born on November '27, l888 in Oakland, California where his father was the minister of the Swedish Mission Covenant Church. He was the first child in a family of ten children. His childhood was spent in the states of California and Washington where his father served as minister. When he entered high school the family was established in Minnesota, and in 1907 he was graduated from high school at Cannon Falls, Minnesota. The following fall he began his career as an educator by teaching in the rural school at Dunnell, Minnesota. The years 1909 - 1911 he taught at Walden College, McPherson, Kansas. In 1911 the family moved back to California - to Berkeley - and that fall he enrolled as a freshman in the University of California. While a student he taught English to foreigners in classes conducted in San Francisco by the San Francisco Y M C A. This work was very successful and satisfying and was carried on during most of his college career. He was elected to membership in Phi Delta Kappa while at the University, and was very active in the chapter. He represented it at national meetings and served as national president from 1931 - 1935. He graduated from the University in 1915 and that fall became a teacher of English and German in the Elko, Nevada high school. He also coached athletics. After two years of teaching here he resigned to enter the Y. M. C. A. War Service program at Camp Hearn, near San Diego. In October, 1917, he was inducted into the 363rd Infantry Regiment of the 91st Division and received his training at Fort Lewis, Washington. In July, 1918, he was sent to France, serving as Sergeant Major. He was injured in action in the Meuse-Argonne Sector, but recovered and returned to his regiment. When Rudolph D. Lindquist became the director of the Ohio State University School, a new venture of the College of Education of Ohio State University, he faced the formidable task of finding a staff which would foster pioneering experimental education. He combed the country for personnel; educators learned to respect his skill in selecting people, many of whom were embarking on their first very important educational experience. Individuals whom Rudolph Lindquist thus "discovered" and engaged for his new school included men and women who were later to become nationally known in education: Robert J. Havighurst, Harold Fawcett, Lou LaBrant, H.H. Giles, Rose Lammel, Oliver Loud, Frieda Heller, Beatrice Perham, Mary Aibright Giles, Paul Diederich, Guy Cahoon, Blanche Kent Verbeck, to name but a sampling. It was this staff, under Rudolph Lindquist's direction, who pioneered in developing such educational approaches as the nature of proof, extended field trips, creative writing, and, most notably, the core curriculum. Few were the schools of the early 1930's experimenting with core curriculum, and much of its development traces to the experimentation of the staff of the Ohio State University School during the 1930's. One of the outstanding contributions of the school during Rudolph Lindquist's directorship was the book written by students of the school,