DECEMBER 1964 UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT ROLLA
Chancellor Merl Baker and President Elme r Ellis
MSM Alumni Association
Dr.
O FFICERS
Published b y the MSM Alumni A ssociation Uni ve rsity of Mi sso uri at Rolla Rolla, Mi ss ouri
Volume 38
DECEMBER 1964
President ...... ............. ...... .. ............ .]a mes W. Stephens '47
Term Expires
......1IJisso uri Pub lic Service Co. 10700 East 50 Highway Ka nsas C ity 38, Missouri
... ... .. R. O. Kasten '43
Executive Vice-President ...
.. Shef fi eld Division Armco Steel Corp. 7 100 Roberts Kansas City 25 , Misso uri
Vi ce-Presid ent Areas 1, 2,3 ......... J . C ra ig E ll is '38 Vice-President Areas 4 , 5, 6........ Joseph W. Mooney '39
ON THE COVER
Secretary-Treasurer ..
...................... . 1965
Bot!
..... 3 10 Woods End Road Westfield, New J ersey
.. 1965
.7383 Westmoreland U ni versit y C it y 30, 1'1 issoll ri
Vice·President Areas 7,8, 9 ......... William B . F letcher '34 .......
Number 6
.. .................... 1965
1208 1 Smallwood Down ey, Ca li fo rn ia
Exec uti ve Secretary ..................... .Fra ncis C. Edwards .... . Ed itor, " lIJ SM ALUM NUS"
... 1965
July 1 the Sd
Me
...................... 196 5
....... Assis tant D ean Misso uri School of Mines Ro lla, M isso uri
.. .. ....... Leon H ershkowitz '41
the fir! of Mis colo r which ass umi the ele of Mis allurgl'
............. .......... 1965
.. :"I S]ll Alumni Association Old M eta llurgy Bui lding Ro lla , AIissou ri
by GO\
er was Elmer sity of of dig
univw
from c and pr the COL
DIRECTORS AT LARGE
Dr. ........ .. 2068 Cooli dge Place, Schenectady, l\ew Yor\:. .... .................... .. 1965
Allan]. K iesler '40 Gil ber t F. M etz ' 14
.. 1965
............. 8 16 Cypress R oad, Vero Beach , F lorida ...
Rex Z . Williams '3 1 ................ __ .... ..
...... Ro lla Sta te Bank , R olla , :'lisso ur i ............................ .
196 5
AREA DIRECTORS
Area No.
D irector
Slales and Provinces E n1 braced
1 .. ....... Lawrence A. Spani er 155 1 Fran klin Avenue M'in neola , Long l sland , New York
... S. Ar:-. , N. c., S. Ala., Ga. , Fla.
.... J. O. Ferrell '40 1605 Nort h 10 th St. Longview, T exas
Dr. M erl Baker (Ie j t ) 1'eceives a scroll, t h e symboL of his office as C hancel101', from Dr. liLm er Ellis, Presid ent of the University of Missouri, at th e inaugu.mtion of Dr. B aker as the first C han cellor oj the Univ ers·i ty of M isSO I/I'; at R olla.
3 ....
......... ~c w England , i\ . Y., --:-J. J.. East I'a. , D ist. of Columbia , ]lI d. , \ ·a., Delaware, Province of Quebec
. ......... ........................ Pennsy lvan ia, \V . \ ·a., Ohio , \\'. Pa., .. 608 Vi llavista , Pittsburgh 34 , Pennsylvania K y ., Tenn ., Ind . ( Except Chicago Indust ria l Area )
4 ........... Fra nk C. Appleya rd '37 ..
1209 Mi lwa ukee Ave., Gl envi ew, III.
T erm Expires
....N. 111. , Chicago Industr ial Area .. in .Ind ia na, \r isc., :\I ich ., l\Iinn .,
Hoi
Thi! 1966
7.......... Robert M . Brackbill Shell Oi l Compa ny Mid la nd, T exas 8..
... F. W. H eiser '39 16 Vik ing D rive Englewood , Colorado
9 .. ....... .. Will ia m B. Fletcher '34 ......... . 1208 1 Smallwood D own ey, Ca liforn ia
1967
........................ . S. I II. , E. 1\ 10 .. :\ . Ark.
:'[0.,
........ 1965
:\ebr.. Ka n., Ok la.
........... T exas, Ar izona , :\" ew .:'Ilex ico
1967
.
...... Ida ., ~l o ntana . :\. 0 ., . D ., "·yo .. Colo .. :\ev. , Utah, Prov inces of :'[a niloba, Sask. , Alberta ............. las ka, \\ 'as hin gton, Ort'., Ca li fornia , H a waii
lor tht and di tion.
1966
P rovince of Ontario 5........... Richard H . Bauer '52 .. . 5 Sappington Acres Drive t. Louis 26, lVIisso uri
[
1967
1966
:'liss., ..
... 0. Vi. Kamper 13 5 ........
6........... Bennett D. Howell '50 ........................................ Iowa. \\'. 33 13 South Pittsburgh, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Issued bi -monthly in th e int eres l of th e grad uat es and former stud e nt s of the Mis souri Schoo l of Min es and M e t a llurgy and th e Univ ersi ty of M issour i at Rolla. Subscription price , $1.50 , includ ed in Alumni Du es . En tered as second -c la ss matter October 27 , 1926, at Post Office at Rolla, Mis souri und e r the Act of March 3 , 1 897 .
c., La ..
presidt the pri A. Fir
1966
Associ future ning f ing ail uebted of the poinle(
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will bt month: implen
We 1967
licipale Mer! !
6. Thi.
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SitI' St.
2
MSM Alumnus
Decem
Dr. Baker Inaugurated as UMR's First Chancellor Expires
.... 1965
... 1965
... 1965 .... 1965
... 1965 .1965
l.
Dr. Merl Baker was inaugurated as the first Chancellor of the Univer sity of Mis souri at Rolla , Nov ember 6, in co l orfu l and impressive ceremonies which formally marked not only his assuming the chancellorsh ip but also the elevation of the form er University of Missouri Schoo l of Mines and Metallurgy to full Univer sity status . Both these changes were effective last July 1. Dr. Baker had been dean of the School of Mines since 196 3. After a colorful procession , h eaded by Govern o r J o hn M. Dalton, Dr. Baker was invested as chancellor by Dr. Elmer Ellis, president of the Unive rsity of Missouri, before a large gro up of d ignitaries, which included state and university officials and representatives from colleges, unive rsities an d learned and pr ofeSS ional societies fro m all over th e country. Dr. H enry H eald , New York City, pres ident of th e Ford Foundation , was th e principal inaugural speaker. Jam es A. Finch , Cape Girardeau , President
of the Univers ity of Missouri Board of Curators , presided.
m orrow was the main theme str essed by the s peakers for the occas io n .
Taking as h is topic " The Environm en tal Pers pective ", Dr. H eald stressed the role of the engineer and scientist in building the environment of the fu ture .
Dr. Ellis presented Dr. Baker with the symbol of his high and respons ible office, in inves ting Dr. Baker w ith the chancellorship. Pres id ent Elmer Ellis lauded his devotion to the cause of engineering education .
P ointing o ut that the environm.ental revolution was b o rn indirectly an d directly from th e sc ientific and techno logical revol utions , Dr. H ea ld nam.ed populati on g r owth and urbanization as two of om maj or environmental problems.
" If we adhere to piecemeal and crisis approach to human an d natural phenomena, we may find o urselves b eing conquered by an urban wild erness just as we conquer ed the natural wilderness", Dr. H eald said. ' We need research n ot only on the development of ind ustrial processes but on the longrange environmental effects of new technology! " The importance of science and engineering in the world today and to-
Dr. Baker, in his acceptance s p eech, outlined his hopes fo r the future of the University of Misso uri at Rolla , setting 1970, the centennial date of the sch ool 's founding, as the target date for the achievement of the goal of lead ership in engineerin g. "The development of the University of Rolla in research both at graduate and und ergr aduate levels will go hand in hand with the development of ind ust ry within the state," Dr. Baker said. " I d on 't know of any other investment that wo uld return more to the economic growth of Missouri than the development of o ur existing and en-
(C on'tinued on Page 4)
PRESIDENT'S COLUMN 1966
. 1960
1966
196i
1965
. 1966
196i
H o lid ay G reetings and Bes t Wish es for the N ew Year from your officers and directors of the Alum ni Association. Thi s bas been a good yea r fo r yo ur Association in rnany res pects and the futur e looks very bright for UMR. Planning for the 1970 Centennial is coming along in fin e shape . W e are all indebted for the excellent partic ipation of th ose Alumni who have b een appo inted to serve in fo rm ulating the in itia l Centennial planning . Many m ore w ill be as k ed to serve in the com ing months as planning progr esses and implem.entati o n begins . We were pleased to attend and participate in the inaugural of Chancell or Merl B aker on the campus November 6 . This was quite a milestone for MSM ma rking its transiti on to full univerSity status . On behalf of all Alumni December 1964
everyw here, we pledged ou r support to Chanc ellor Baker and his univerSity, and to the unive rsity system. In th e yea rs to con'le with the increasing em phaSiS in Misso uri on higher ed ucation and research , UMR will have an im p ortant role to play. You r board of directors took an optimistic view of the coming year and voted to increase our budget this yea r to enab le a facu lty development g rant and assistance to the Athletic D epartment through its grants-in-aid program. This n ecessarily can only occm with broad pa r tiCipation by Alumni in the Alumni Fund . This is the only way we can fina nce any of our prog ra ms. Those of you wh o have s upported the association and its prog rams in the past can do m uch to encourage others to d o likewise, especially our new Alumni who are grad uat-
ing each year in ever-increasing numbers. W e have often talked of achieving a ten-do llar average contribution but it seem s to b e far m o r e important to get broad contribution participation, regardles s of the amount. As we get participation the average should take ca r e of itself in due course. W e wer e all impressed with Homecoming this year and yo u'd do well to start planning now to come back next fa ll , es pecially yo u fellows from Classes of ' 15 and '4 0. The classes of '14 and '3 9 had a wonderful turnoLit this year. Again, best wishes for a Merry Chr istmas and H appy N ew Year to all A lu mni everywhere.
J.
W. Stephens '47 President MSM Alumni Association 3
Dignitaries at Chancellor's Inauguration
On
student! Missour copol C Left to right: James W. Stephens '47, President, MSM Alumni Association; Dr. Curtis L. Wilson, Dean Emeritus MSM; Dr. Henry Heald , President, Ford Foundation; Dr. Elmer Ellis, President, University of Missouri ; Dr. Mer! Baker, Chancellor, University of Missouri at Rolla ; James A. Finch, Jr., President, Board of Curators, University of Missouri .
visioned engineering and scientific program, " he said.
Missouri's Chief Executive Speaks
Dr. Baker predicted that by the centennial date of 1970, the Rolla campus which is already one of the largest undergraduate engineering schools in the nation , would rank as third largest if current growth trends continue.
MOr(
Rolla a
the 191 and 17.
The day ma this grc llliitee r launche, They I, dent Fr pany, S phI' '35 pany, ~ gineers,
Preceding the installation ceremonies , greetings were conveyed to the chancellor by Governor Dalton on behalf of the state. It was under Governor Dalton's administration that the University made great forward strides.
4
Jame
preside: spoke Dale Iv preside:
[
In working toward the goal of leadership in engineering education, the faculty of the University was charged by Dr. Baker with continued excellent development and the State of Missouri with the support of the scientific and engineering programs in which the school specializes.
Dr. Curtis L. Wilson, St. Louis, dean emeritus, who led the School of
Mines thefacu
Governor John M. Dalton Conveys Greetings to the New Chancellor MSM Alumnus
Decell1b.
ritus lker, ouri.
.1urn nus
Dr. Henry Heald Delivering Inaugural Address
On the stage , left to right : Dale Marshall '65 , Past Presi dent of the Student Council who spoke in behalf of th e students; James W. Stephens ' 47, President of the MSM Alumn i Associat ion ; Dr. Mer! Baker, Chancellor, University of Missouri at Rolla ; Dr. Elmer Ellis; Governor John M. Dalton ; Dr. Curtis L. Wilson; Reverend Joseph Carlo , Christ Epis copal Church .
Mines forward, spoke on behalf of the faculty. J ames W. Stephens, Raytown, Mo., president of the alumni association spoke on behalf of the alumni, and Dale Marshall, Collinsville, Ill. , past president of the student cow1Cil, on
behalf of the students. The invocation and benediction were given by the Reverend J oseph Carlo, rector , Christ Church Episcopal, Rolla. Music for the processional and recessional were provided by Mrs. John Morris at the organ and by the UMR-
ROTC band as the inaugural procession crossed the campus. Speakers, state and university officials, and delegates were guests at an informal luncheon following the inauguration ceremonies. Mr. Finch presided at the luncheon.
1964 HOlnecoming Attracts 1,500 Alumni Mor e than 1,5 00 alum ni were on the Ro lla cam pus attending the act ivities of the 1964 H o m ecoming , October 16 and 1 7 . The Centennial Com.11l.ittee met Friday m o rning , the second m.eeting of this group . The I ndustrial Gins Com1T1ittee reported that their program was launch ed by two gifts , from alum.ni . They were J o hn P. Soult ' 39, Pr es iden t Fru in Colnon Contracting Company, St. Lo ui s, and J ames ]. Murphy ' 35, Pr es id ent, The Murphy Company, Mechan ical Contractors and En gineers, St. Lo uis . December 1964
At the Annu al Meeting of the AIUlTlni Associati o n and Convocation the principal s peaker was Gale Bullman , Director of Ath letics, UMR. The Alumni Associat io n presented him with an H o n orary Memb ership in th e Association. The Alumni Associati on awarded the Citati on of Mer it to fo ur d istin guished alulTlni; Mrs . Eva Green e ' 11 , D irector of th e Greene Aptitud e T esting Ser vice, H o ll oywood, California; Samuel H. Ll oyd '21 , Professor of Humanities, UMR; J os eph J. Kr ebs ' 16, J oseph]. K rebs and Sons, Engineers, New Orleans, Louisiana , and Israel H. Lovett '24, Professor Emeri-
tus of Electr ical Engineering, UMR. The Class Reuni ons were well attend ed at the n oon hour on Saturday. Th e classes in the fi ve-year intervals fr om 1919 to 1959 gather ed and the Class of 19 39 had the largest gr o up r eturn with more than thirty attending their ILU1cheon . The yo uthful Min er football team did n ot do so well against the strong an d experienced Kirksville , Bulldog eleven. The Miners ar e coming along nicely and will b e contender s in a yea r or so. After the gam e mor e than 300 alull1 -
5
ni, fac ul ty, gues ts and friend s or th e sc hoo l attended Chancello r and Mrs . Baker 's Reception in the Elect ri c:t! Eng in ee rin g Buildin g .
HomecorTIing Convocation Speaker
Saturday evenin g , 150 attended the Annual Alumni Banqu et in th e Ball room of th e Stud ent Union. H o no red g ues ts were the H o meco min g Qu een Mi ss Anita Macko an d her esco rt Gary Kincad e; Wayne Huckabee, Pres id ent o r th e Student Union B oard and Wil li am No rfl eet , Pr esident of the Student Co uncil. James W. Stephens '47, Pr es id ent of the Alumni Assoc iati o n , was master of cerem oni es at this occasion . The H omecom ing Dance was staged in the Ballroom after th e banquet. Dr. H erb ert R. Hanley '01, was the o ld es t alu mn us to attend this annual event. H e is Profes s o r Em eritus o f Metallurgical Engineer ing and is teaching part-tim e at UMR . The Bo ard of Directors of the Alumni Association at their annual meeting voted to underwrite a $ 3,000.00 Fac ulty Impr ove ment Grant and $ 1,0 00.00 for the Gran t-In -Aid Prog ram of the A t hl e ti c D epa rtm ent. Th ese fund s will co m e from al umni contributions to the Alumni Association.
Seated, left to rig ht : J . Kent Roberts '50; J . O . Ferrell ' 40 ; Mrs . V. H. McN utt '60, Honorar y Life Member MSM Alumni Association ; James W . Stephens; Chance llor Merl Baker.
Gale Bullman Honored
Pr
cafe oj il mak recipiel receive
JOleph '24, Ro
$750,000 Library Grant The Univers ity of Missouri at R o lla received $750 ,000 toward a $2,250,0 00 library. This all ocation was made by The State Commiss io n on Higher Education from a $5, 14 3, 192 grant to 15 state colleges and univer s ities . The m.oney which will b e made available over a fi ve-yea r period , was part of a $230- mill ion federa l g rant und er the H ig her Ed Ll cat i o n Facilities Act of 1963 . The school received a $1,5 00,000appropri atio n [rom the las t state legis lature fo r the constructio n of a library . This s upplement wi ll greatly aid in enlarging this facility wh ich is bad ly needed.
6
In II Ihe Bo
Gale Bullman , Athl e tic Director of UMR , receives honorary me mbe rship in lhe MSM Alumni As sociation from President James W . Stephens. Chancellor Baker is at lef!.
Alunlni and tw 10 fill lars of and No
MSM Alumnus
Decel11 b
Certificate of Merit Recipien t
rector, Area No.1 , and Robert M. Brackbill '42, Shell Oil Company , Midland, Texas, Director, Area No.7. B ob Brackbill received his degree in Mining Engineering, Petroleum Option, and joined Shell Oil Company as a trainee engineer in southern Illinois. H e entered the Aviation Cadets of the Army Air Force in 1942 and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in 194 3. H e served in the Air Force for three years and was discharged in 1945 as a Major. He spent two years overseas in the European theate r of operations. Upon ret urning from service, he rejoined Shell as a junior engineer in Oklahoma. In 1948 he was advanced to District Engineer.
¡ H.
W.
Pro f. Samu e l H . Llo yd, J r., ' 21, receives th e Alumn i A ssoc iation ' s Certifi cate of M erit during th e Ho m ecoming Convocation. Pres ident Stephens (l eft) is making the presentation. R. O. Kasten ' 43 is sho wn at th e right. Oth er rec ipi e nt s of th e Certificate of Merit w ho were not present to personall y receive th e a w ard we r e: Mrs. Eva H . Green e ' 11 , Hollywood , California; Jo se ph J. Krebs, ' 16, N ew Orl ea n s, La .; and Prof . Em eri tu s Israel H . Lovett ' 24, Rolla .
In January 1950, he was transferred to Calgary, Alberta, Canada, which was the first of 18 maj or transfers he has experienced since the war. On this transfer he left Oklahoma with the temperature at 60 degrees, two days later he was near Slave Lake in the proximity of the Northwest Territory with the temperature dipping to 60 below zero. For the next forty days the temperature failed to rise above 40 below zero. H e was named Production Superintendent in Canada in 1951 and was known as the only Production Superintendent with Shell without a barrel of oil production . H is record was something like 42 str aight dry h o les. Bob stated that, "Thi s record might have had something to do with my early return to H ouston, Texas , in 195 2 where I was named Assistant to the Director of Technical Services. " In this pOSition he was liaison between research and operations.
,rship
.cell or
Ro bert M. Brackbi ll
La wre nce A . Sp a ni er
In the fall election for members of the Board of D ir ectors of th e MSM Alunu1i Association two incumbents and two new member s were chosen to fill the expiring terms for D irectors of Areas No.1, No.5 , No.7 and No.9.
Th e incumb e nt s re-elected were Richard H. Bauer '52, Dir ector Area o. 5 and William B . Fletcher '34, D irector Area No.9. The new Directors are Lawrence A. Spanier '50, 1551 Franklin Avenue, Mineola, Long Island, New York, Di-
De cem ber 1964
In 1953, he was named Division Exploration Engineer in Odessa, Texas. In 1955 he was transferred to the Shell G rou p offices in The Hag u e , Netherlands, to acquaint him with the world-wide operations of the Shell Companies. He traveled extensively in Europe and visited the company 's operations o n the west coast of Africa in Nigeria . He returned to the U. S. and spent over a year on the personal staff of 7
Shell 's Executive Vice President who is now the Corporate President. Bob was n,ade Manager of Economic Analysis and later Manager of Production Economics. Hi s stay in New York was the longest of his career and probably, too, the most rewarding. In April 1963, he was transferred to Midland, Texas and is the Division Production Manager of what is perhaps Shell's largest division, supervising over some 4,000wells, physically operating approximately 2,500. They are located in just about every oil producing county in West Texas. Mrs . Brackbill, Cay, was a Yankee nurse anesthetist whom Bob met in New York. She was originally from New England. Bob 's sporting interests are beachcombing in the summer and skiing in the winter. Brack is active in the American Petroleum Institute and AIME activities. H e is on the Board of Directors of the Permian Basin 'Oil · Show and one of the lecturers for the API public relations activities. Lawrence A. Spanier '50, the new Director, Area No.1, received his de-
gree in Electrical Engineering. During his time on th e campus he was very active in the School's activities as the Student Council, Student Chapter AlEE, Society of American Military Engineers, Interfaith Council, Alpha Epsilon Pi social fraternity, Tau Beta Pi and Blue Key.
seen a substantial growth since its inception. Recently the company formed Tech Aid's, Inc., another representative firm which is involved with the selling of the technical products to the educational field. In June 1958, Mr. Spanier married the former Lurana M. Tucker, of Los Angeles, California, whom he met on a business trip to that area. They are now living in Plainview, Long Island, New York, with their two children , Douglas, age 4, and Ava, age 9 months. A third is expected in the spring.
Upon graduation he accepted a position with Eastern Air Devices, Inc., of Brooklyn, New York, as a motor design engineer. Later he became applications engineer and sales engineer. In 1953 the company relocated in Dover, New Hampshire, and Larry began to travel throughout the United States as the company's technical representative.
Outside of his business activities, Mr. Spanier is a Major in the U. S. Army Res erve, active in local political, civic and youth organizations and is currently endeavoring to obtain his private pilot's license.
In 1956, he became product manager for the Ketay Division of the N orden Ketay Corporation.
from t ing at 1
Can
three s of ave! at a cos chapter and ki be mac structu existin/ dOlVns t be coni Later, t be tOri dormit,
The Alan f er and Missou
Hom
In March 1958, two of Larry's business associates and he founded the manufacturers representative firm of Comtronic Associates, Inc. , and they were fortunate to have as their first line Eastern Air Devices and soon followed by several 0 t h er electronic component manufacturers. Comtronic Associates, Inc., is now a well known firm in the metropolitan New York area and has
New Sigma Nu House The brothers of Sigma N u are proud to· announce that construction ·wa! start immediately on a new house. Occupancy is slated for next September.
Bus
Guy appoint for De
The new structures will be on the same block where Sigma Nu has resided for the past 50 years, across
Architect's drawing showing view of new proposed Sigma Nu House from southeast.
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Dr. Elm
versity { present due to p 8
MSM Alumnus
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hom the Chemical Engineering building at 100 7 Main. Construction will be carried out in three stages. First, a single story unit of over 5 ,000 sq uare feet will b e built at a cost of $90 ,000 , providing a livingchapter room, library, dining room , and kitchen. The basen"lent will later be made into a recreation room. This structure will b e built b etween the two existing structures of Sigma Nu. The downstairs of th e present house will be converted into sleeping-study rooms. Later , the present house and annex will be torn do wn and replaced by a new dormitory. The house was partially designed by Alan H oener '36, of John P. Hoemer and As sociates, Architects , St. Louis , Missouri.
Homecomers Hear Bus Entsminger Guy H . "Bu s " Entsminger, recently appointed Assistant to the President for Development and Alumni Affairs
n the as reo cross
lur11 nus
Alumni Officers and Directors
Alumni Association officers and directors who attended the annual Board of Directors meeting during Homecoming. Seated, left to right: Joseph W. Moone y ' 39, St. Louis, Missouri, Vice President, Areas 4, 5, 6; Ike Edwards, Rolla, Mo., Executive Secretary; James W. Stephens '47, Kansas City, Missouri, President; Richard H. Bauer '52, St. Louis, Missouri, Director Area 5. Standing, left to right : O. W. Kamper '35, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Director, Area 2; J. O . Ferrell '40, Longview, Texas, Director, Area 2; Rex Z. Williams '31, Rolla, Missouri , Director-at-Large; Frank C. Appleyard '37, Glenview , Illinois, Director, Area 4 ; Lawrence A. Spanier '50, Mineola, Long Island, New York , Director, Area 1. R. O . Kasten ' 43, Kansas City, Missouri, Executive Vice President, was present at the meeting but was absent meeting with the Centennial Committee at the time the picture was taken .
Welcoming Kick-off Buffet Dinner at Homecoming
Guy H. Entsminger
of the University of Missouri, spoke to the Convocation gathering at Homecoming. Mr. Entsminger s poke on beh'lLf of Dr. Elmer Ellis, President of the University of Missouri who could not be present at the Homecoming activities , due to prior commitments. December 1964
Leading the buffet dinner line, left to right: Mrs . Baker, Chancellor Baker, Mrs. Stephens, J. W . Stephens '47; E. G . "Ted" Machin '22.
9
Class of 1924
5 "Capt(
Back row, left to right: Professor J. L. Andrews, W. A. Schaffer, Jr., Paul D. Wilkinson, W. E. H. Knight, Guy R. Scott. Front row : J . P. " Barney" Bryan, Mrs. Schaffer, Mrs . Wilkinson, Mrs . Knight, Mrs . Scott.
Kermil Kenyo Unider
Webb,
Class of 1929
Left to right : Hugo Harrod, Mrs . Mon sch , Mrs . Harrod , Henry Monsch, Charles J . " Jack " Bolon , Mrs . Bolon , Mrs. Morris , Orville W. Morris , Louis H. Schuette. 10
Potter, Harry C.
le HUbb a
MSM Alumnus
Deceml
Class of 1939
;uy R.
Standing, left to right : Joseph W. Mooney, Joel Lo ver idge, Robert Runyan, H. S. Barger, Harold Miller, H. S. " Captain " Kidd , John E. Ki ser, John P. Soult, Irving E. Shanfield, Clarence Bauman, John J. Parker, unidentified , Kermit Siegrist, Howard Fillmer, L. E. Smith, Charles Boulson , Wade Waters , P. J . Moore, Robert Dieffenbach, Robert Kenyon , Kenneth Tuckett, Richard Love, Walter Mussel , John H. Livingston, William L. Sullivan. Seated, left to right: Unidentified, Morris Boorky, Mrs. Soult, unidentified, unidentified , unidentified, Mrs . Mooney, unidentified, Dr. William Webb, unidentified, unidentified, Jack Moore, Mrs. J . P. Moore, unidentified, Mrs . Livingston , Mrs. Sullivan.
Class of 1944
rry C.
lurn nus
Leh to right: Bob Klorer, Linda Setchfield , Mr s. Setchfield, Mrs. Emerso n, B. F. Em erso n, A . J. Fuch s, J r., Wi ll iam Hubbard , Mrs . Thiele" Alfred W . Thi e le, Robert Setchfield , Gene Setchfield , Mrs. Bob Klorer. December 1964
11
Classes of 1949 and 1954 Th ingIV
Do
neerir. Willia his E neerir. ?fetTel
B. S. with tl
For side of table, left to right: Wayne Oceto ' 54, James B. McGrath '49, leonard Schuler '49, Robert M. Cage '49, Mrs . Cage, Gene Tyrer '49, Mrs. Holmes, Gerald D. Holmes '4 9. Near side of table, left to right: Mrs. Aceto, Ralph Schowalter '4 9, Mrs. Schowalter, Mrs . Knecht, Walter S. Knecht '49; Mrs. Hrach, Stanley Hrach '49, Mrs. Tyrer.
Thl of ih Aluml ember in Lo ferred Home get a vacatic back Terrel ing ac (omin
out c again.
Class of 1959
An( was tl Green which absent certific Banno
Tor was
IV
in thi~
~
and Mrs.
J
Glenn en CI Clare tr '34
Mr.
DJ
and N Hirdle HarseJ lister
'60; ~ Major
Front of table, left to right: Robert A. Lemberger, Willard Jankins , Mrs. J e nkin s, Mrs. Smith , Homer Smi th . Back of table , left to righ t: Paul B. Sisk, Gordon Johnson, Mrs. John son, Mrs . Hadl er, Pal mer H. Hadler . 12
MSM Alumnus
and M Alysko
Mrs. I Joe \
Deceml
Alumni in Peace Corps Three of our alumni are now serving with the Peace Corps. Donald L. H ey '63, a Civil Engineering graduate is serving in Malaya. William Roy Jones '62, who received his B. S. degree in Chemical Engineering is in Nigeria, and William J. Pfefferkorn '61, who also r eceived his B. S. degree in Civil Engin eering is with the Corps in Pakistan .
Los Angeles Section
'49, Ralph
Ie
The belated Homecoming Meeting of the Los Angeles Secti on of the Alumni As sociation was held on N ovem.ber 7 at the R edwoo d Restaurant in Los Angeles . Our meeting was deferred un til three weeks fo llow ing Homecoming at Rolla so we could get a first-hand r eport from the three vacationers who niade the lo ng trip back to R olla . Bill Knig ht, Bannon Terrell , and J im Gerard all have glowing accounts of the successful Homecoming and of the big kick they got o ut of being back on the campus again. An other high spot of th e meeting was the p resentation to Eva Hi rdler Greene of the " Certificate of Merit " which had been awarded to her in absentia at Homecoming , and which certificate was delivered in person by Bannon T errell.
Back
Tom Barber of the class of '64 was welcomed as the newest graduate in this area. Others p resen t were: Mr. and Mrs. Tom Barber '64 ; Me and Mrs . Ray B orchers ' 33; Me and Mrs. G lenn Brand '39 ; Mr. and Mr s . R o bert Choate '50 ; Mr. and Mrs . Tom Clare '55; Mr. and Mrs . W. B. Fletcher '34; Mr. and Mrs Jim G erard '5 4 ; Mr. and Mrs. Ed A. God at '29; Mr. and Mr s. J im Gostin '44; Mrs. Eva Hirdler Greene ' 11 ; Mr. and Mrs . T o m Harsell '39; Mr. and Mrs . S. E. Hol lister ' 13; Mr. an d Mrs . Paul Jordan '60; Mr. and Mrs . Bill Knight '24; Major and Mrs. Chet Miller '50; Mr. and Mrs. John Muehring '50; Mr. Ed Mys kowski '4 1, and guest; Mr. and Mrs. Barney Nuell '21; Mr . and Mrs . Joe Quinn '49; Mr . and Mrs. Bi ll December 1964
Schirmer '49; Mr. and Mr s. John Schmitz '33 ; Mr. and Mrs J ames Siebels '62 ; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Smith '41; Mr. and Mr s . Rich ard Smith '62; Mr. and Mrs . Bannon T errell '3 2; Mr. and Mrs . Tom Wier ' 22; and Mr. J o hn Wilms '43 , and guest.
Baumgartner Gets Award From SAE Professor George R. Baumgartner '56, Department of Mechanical Engineering, UMR, has been selected as as a recipient of a Ralph A. Teetor Educational Fund award by the Society of Automotive Engineers. George is student advisor to the student branch of the Society of Automotive Engineers. As the award winner, he will be a guest of the Educational Fund at the S.A.E. International Automotive Engineering Congress in Detroit, Michigan, January 11 to 15 . Mr. Baumgartner will be accompanied to Detroit by Professor Scofield, chairman of the student activities group of the S.A.E.; Professor Charles R . Remington, Jr., Secretary to the St. Louis Section and Dr. Adolph Feingold, Professor of Mechanical Engineering who will present a paper before the Society. The student branch of S.A.E. at UMR is the largest in the country with nearly 300 members. It won the national award last year as the best student branch in the nation .
many years, und er the Mo rrill Act of 1862, which estab lished land grant colleges . The dropping of the compulsory feature is in lin e with action by a number of state ed ucational institutions in recent yea r s and has th e tacit consent of the D epartment of D efen se. A r ecent fed eral law modified the m ilitary ed ucational program at colleges w ith the view of producing more commiss ioned officer s. UMR continues to have this sch ool year the largest Engineer ROTC unit in the country.
James Finch Named to State Supreme Court J ames A. Finch, Jr. , Chairm an of the Board of Curators, University of Missouri , and H o norary Member,MSM Alumni ASSOCiation, has been named by Governor John M . Dalton to the seven-man Missouri Supreme Court. Mr. Finch , 57 , from Cape Girardeau, is the second Republican named to the non-partisan court system . Mr. Finch has been a member of the Board of Curators since 195 1 and chairman of the Board since 1954. Under the system , Mr. Finch 's term w ill r un until the 1966 election, when h e will seek r etention by the voters for a 12-year term. He will ass ume office January 1, 1965. The n ew justice will replace Judge
C. A. Leedy, Jr. whose ter m expires
ROTC Traini ng to Be Voluntary Reser ve Officer Training Corps military trai ning for st udent s at th e Univers ity of Missouri will be voluntary starting September 1965. T he UniverSity Board of Curators voted to end comp ulsory participation by fr es hmen and sophomores in the ROTC program. A total of 3368 students are enroll ed in Army and Air Force basic ROTC co urses this year. Military tr aining for freshmen and sophomores at th e R o lla and Columb ia campu ses has been co mpulsory for
December 31, 1964 . Earlier this year, Judge Leedy anno unced his retirement after having had the lo ngest tenure of anyon e. He was named to the bench in 1933 . The Board of Curators of the University of Mis souri at a recent meeting elected Robert Neill, a St. Louis attorney, president of the Board. He s ucceeds James A. Finch , J r., who.reSigned the office of president of th e Board to accept an appo intment as a Judge of the Missouri Supreme Court. J udge Finch will continue to serve as a member o f the Board. Mr. Neill, a member of th e law firm of Thompson, Mitchell, Doug13
las and Neill, was first appoin ted to th e b oard ill. 1957 by the late Governor J ames T. Blair, Jr. , and was reapp o inted for a s ix-year term by Govern o r J o hn M. Dalton in 196 3. H e is a grad uate of the University of Mi sso uri and the H arvard Law School. H e lives at 5056 Westm ins ter Place.
Tw e for col science eng inel June 7
MISSOURI SCHOO L OF MINES ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BALANCE SHEET AS OF October 31, 1964
Graduate School Five Times as Large as in '5 7 One of the fastest growing d epartments on the campus is the Graduate School. Over a span of seven years, fro m 1957 to 1964, the increase has b een from 89 to 534 students, a 5 00 percent increase, while the undergraduate departments have had a 30 p ercent increase. Master's d egrees are now offered in all departments with g eological engineering, geophysics, mathematics, nuclear engineering and mechanics being the latest additions. Doctoral degrees are offered in the following engineering curricula: Ceramics, Chemical, Civil, Electrical, Metallurgical, Mining , and Chemistry, Engineering Phys ics, and G eology. This year twenty professors with doctoral degrees were added to the faculty. Ther e are presently 69 candidates for the Ph .D. degree. There are n ow eleven different types of fellowships to aid those seeking graduate degrees. Some of the fellows hips and aids are: N atio nal Science Fo undati on Trainees hips, Pred octoral Fellowshi ps of the N atio nal Aeron au tics and Space Admini stratio n, The Coop and Graduate Fellowships of the National D efense and Education Act Fellows hips and various industrial fellowships. In o rd er to b ecome a candidate for graduate sch ool, a 2.5 overall grade point average is req uired . Once accepted into the grad uate sch ool, a 3.0 is mandatory to remain in graduate sch ool.
The sorshir dation,
ASS ETS
$
Cash on Hand and in Bank - Re gu lar Accoun t Cash in Bank - Lacl e d e Stee l Em e rgency Fund Cash in Bank - Robert E. Dye Endowme n t Fu nd Inve stmen ts - A lumni Association In vestme n ts - A lumni Association Endowment Fund In vestments - Robert E. Dye Endowment Fund Off ice Equip m ent a t Cost
30 8.87 1,020 .00 832 .87 9,706 .93 3,500 .00 3 8, 927 .60 2,0 35.5 0
$ 56,331.77
Dire
stitute lor of ter. 01 of Ihe directo. rule. Thir
LI A BILITIES AN D MEMBER 'S EQUITY
$
Accr u e d Withh o lding Taxes Sch o larship and G ift Fu n d s Robert E. Dye Endowment Fu nd Al um n i A ssocia t io n Endow m ent Fu nd Member's Equi t y
89 .77 2,79 1. 96 3 9,7 60 .47 3,5 00.00 10, 189 .57
$ 56,33 1.77
BU DGET and EXPENSES Salary and Wages MSM Alumnus Pr inting Payro ll Taxes Mi sc. Expe n ses Postage Tra ve l Office Expenses Scho larships Grants - In- A id Ath letic Pro gram Facu lty Development Grant
$
Budget
Expenses
Bud get
196 3 -64
1964- 6 5
8,545 .00 5,000.00 2,300 .00 180 .00 1, 100.00 3,900.00 1,600.00 175 .00 3,000.00
$
8,545 .00 3,4 96.00 1,846. 00 174.00 960 . 13 3,901 .22 1,241.05 16 9 .18 3,0 00. 0 0
$
9,045. 00 5, 000 .0 0 2,5 00.00 174. 0 0 1,20 0 .00 4,200 .00 1,6 00.00 175. 00 3,00 0 .00 1,000 .00 3,000 .00
$ 23,382 .58
Ihe cor teen wi slirule. stipend lolmenl
courses uale cre
In II fered h lion wi and Sla pUling lege te malics
1963-64
$ 25 ,800 .00
$ 30,8 94. 00
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3,000 14
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aitn, wI a deftn he neec MSM Alumnu s
Decell1b
TWD Institutes for Teachers Two eight-week summer i.nstitutes fo r college teachers, one in computer science and one in. nuclear science and engi.neeri.ng, will be held on campus June 7 to July 30,1965.
08.87 20.00 32.87 0693 00.00 '27.60 '35.50 31.77
89.77 91 .96 60.47 00.00 89.57
The i.nstitutes are und er the sponsorship of the National Science FOW1dation, with the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission as a joint spon sor. Director of the co mputer science institute is Professor Ralph Lee, director of the University computer center. Dr. William H. Webb, Chairman of the D epartment of Chemistry, is director of the nucl ear science institute. Thirty-six college teach ers will attend the computer science institute and fifteen will attend the nuclear science in stitute. Participants will receive tax fr ee stipends, allowances for travel and allotments for dependents . All of the courses are on graduate level, and graduate credit may be earned.
31.77
dget
In th e computer science institute, offered here for the third time, instruction will be offered in th e numerical and statistical methods of digital computing and analog computation for co llege teachers of engineering, mathematics and physical sciences. Computing equipment available for in s tructi01~ and research i.nclude two high s peed
digital computer systems , an IBM 1620 Model 1, and an IBM Model 2, auxiliary data processing equipment and several analog computers. In addition to Professor Lee, three other UMR faculty members will teach courses. They are Dr. Robert Chenoweth, professor of electrical engineering; Dr. Charles Antl e, as sociate professo r of m ath ematics; and Dr. Billy E. Gillett , assistant professor of computer science and m athematics. In the nuclear science and engineering institute, which is offered here for the second year , Dr. W ebb will present a course in nuclear chemistry, and Associate Professor Archi Cu lp will teach a course in reactor physics and nuclear reactor ex perimentation. Seminars will incl ude g uest speak ers of nati onal r eputation in ¡speciflc areas of nucl ear en g ineering . Selectio n o f participants in the nuclear science and engin eering institute, special emphasis will b e placed on accommodating science teachers of chemistry and physics on the staffs of colleges which maintain a 3 - 2 program w ith UMR. Inquiries and applications s ho uld be addressed to dir ectors of the in stitute and applications must be return ed by February 15 , 1965.
)4¡65
45.00 00.00 00.00 74.00 00.00 00.00 ,00.00 75.00 100.00
100.0 0 100.00
-
:94.00
~~Father
of Bomb" Speaks on Campus
Dr. Edward Teller, professor of physics at the Lawrence Radiation laboratory of the University of California at Berkeley was on the campus and spoke before the School's Nuclear Engi.neering Society. Dr. T eller who has been called the "father of the bomb ", said that our safety in the next decade depends on the pursuit of applied as well as p ure science " . He said that pure science is a search for knowledge, but without a practical aim, whereas the " applied scientist has a defi.nable goal i.n pursuit of which he needs much knowledge and ingenuDe cember 1964
lty". Teller explained that many tasks lie ahead of the applied scientists, and that the control and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes can provide many useful tools for the future. Speaki.ng in defense of the accusations a ga i ns t development of more ( thermonuclear ) power , he said, "It is . my belief that you wo uld not avoid res ponsibility by avoidi.ng power. Develop the power , and act conscientiously, then discharge your responsibility for the benefit of mankind. " D r. D aniel S. Eppels heimer a member of the Governor 's Science Advisory Committee and Missouri 's representa-
tive on the 18 Southern States Nuclear Energy-for-Peace Use Board arranged for Dr. Teller's visit to the campus. Accompanying Dr. Teller to the campus were Governor John M. Dalton and Dean Emeritus Dr. Curtis Wilson who is also a member of the Governor's Science Advisory Committee.
MIAA TDurney Here The Miners were host to the Sixth Annual MIAA Basketball Tourney held D ecemb er 21, 22, 23 at the Rolla High School Gymnasium. The size of the High School's facility was necessary due to the limitations of the ancient J a c k 1i n g G ymnasium of the School 's campus. The participants were the six schools in the MIAA Conferences plus two guest sch ools, Lincoln University, J efferson City, Missouri and Kansas State College, Pittsburg, Kansas. Central Missouri State College, Warrensburg, took first honors and Southwest Missouri State College, Spri.ngfield, was second. The Miners made a very good show ing and were seventh. They played a very good brand of basketball. They were eliminated from the mai.n round by Spri.ngfleld who was seeded number one team by the coaches. The score was 103 to 83. The Miners' second game was against Southeast Missouri State, Cape Girardeau an d o ur o pponents were able to eek o u t a 82 to 79 victory . In the third game the Miners won over Maryvi lle by a score of 85 to 68 . The Miners h ave played four games of their season 's schedule and have a .500 percent average. They were defeated by Washington University, St. Louis, Mo ., and McKendree College, Lebanon, Illi.nois, and were victors over Bethel College, McKenzie, Tennessee , in a two game series. The conferences gam e s will begi.n January 4th. The teams in the conferenc es are exceptionally strong this year and the wi.nner will have a difficult ti me attai.ni.ng that position. The preseason ch oice, Spri.ngfield, ran into disaster i.n the MIAA tournament. 15
Two Alumni Promoted by Nooter Corp.
A rthur S. Sc h warz
Paul T. Dow li ng
Robert ]. Ryan, Chairman of the Board and President of Nooter Corporation, nationally known steel and all oy fabricators and erectors, St. Louis, Miss o uri, has become Chairman of the Board and chief executive officer.
T. Dowling '40, formerly Vice Presi-
In this administrative change in the Nooter Corporation two alumni were elevated in the corporation. Arthur S. Schwarz '32, fo rmerl y Vice President , will become President and chief operating officer and Paul
dent and General Manager of Sales , was appointed to the newly created post of Executive Vice President. In addition to the Nooter DiviSion, the firm operates the Missouri Boiler and Tank Company, a division , and the St. Louis Metallizing Company, all of St. Louis, including its Field Erection Departm e n t, which operates throughout the entire United States and in foreign countries . Their total emp loyment is 1200.
M . S. in COlnputer Science to Be Offered A graduate program leading to a Master of Science degree in Computer Science will be offered at UMR for the first time in the Spring Semester. Degree work will be administered by the Mathematics Departm.ent, which offers a M. S. degree in Applied Mathematics and will be s upervised jointly by Professor Ralph Lee, Director of the Computer Science Center and Dr. Charle s Hatfield , Chairman of the Mathematics D epartment. A total of 46 credit hours in advanced computer science courses are 16
now taught, with 54 hours in s upporting graduate offerings in the mathe1T1atics departm ent.
Band Invited to New York World's Fair The UMR R OTC concert ban d has been invited to present several concerts _ at th e World's Fair in New York in the spring. David L. Oakley, band director, received a letter from R ob ert Moses, president of the Fair, extending the invitation. The possibilities fo r sending the band are being investigated. T he grou p performs at all home foo tball games and presented a show at Lincoln University at the MinerLincoln game. The band is the largest in th e histor y of the school, and is now in its 5th year as a full time band program. This is one of several band groups co-spon sored by the Univer-I sity and the d epartment of Military Science. In th e past four years the band s have appeared some 70 times throughout th e state and the m arching group has been seen three times on national television .
Chicago Dinner Planned T here will be an Alumni Dinner during the annual meeting of the Amer ican Institute of Mining and Metall urgical Engineers in Chicago , Illinois, February 16, 1965. Plans are not co mplete as we go to press concerning the time and place. We are attempting to have it at the headquarters hotel, the Conrad Hilton, and the date is Tuesday, February 16. Announcements giving the full information will be displayed at the h otel. This will be an evening meeting which will give the al umni in the area an opportunity to attend as well as those attending the annual conference.
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Computing equipment available for instruction and research incl udes two high speed digital com puter systems, an IBM 1620 Model I , and an IBM Model 2, auxiliary data processing equipment and several analog computers. A number of graduate assistantships in computer science are availab le to those working for this degree.
Dr. Vladimir Synecek Is Visiting lecturer Dr. Vladimir Synecek of the In stitute of Solid State Phys ics of the Czechos lavak Academy of Science at Pragu e was a visiting lectur er at the UMR campus, November 16 and 17. Dr. Synecek was accompanied by h is wife, Dr. M. Simerska, a staff mem-
MSM Alumnus
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ber of th e sa me institution, who gave on e of the talks . Dr. Simerska sp o ke sem inar. H er top ic was fraction In vestigat ion of brations in Equilibrium Sol utio n s" .
at a physics " X-Ray DifThermal ViAl-Ag So lid
Dr. Synecek discus sed un iversity education in Czech os lovakia, wit h sp ecial emphas is on physics teac hing, at a I1"leeting of the student secti on of th e Am.erican Institute of Phys ics . Dr. Synecek lect ured at a meeting of Sigma Xi. His s ubj ect was " Small Angle X-Ray Scattering Inves tigation of Guinier-Preston Zones in Al-Ag and Al-Zn Alloys". Dr. Synecek and his wife are vis iting under the auspices of the American Association of Physics T eachers and the American Institute of Physics as a part of a broad , nationwide p r ogram to stimulate interest in phys ics . The program is supported by the National Science Fo un dation . Du ring their trip to the United States , the Syneceks will lecture at 12 colleges and un iversities. They will present research papers at the Pittsb urgh Diffractio n Conference, Mell on Institute, Pittsburgh. Dr. Synecek h o lds a docto r ate from Charles University in Prague and the CSc (candidate of math ematical and physical sciences) fr om the Czechoslovak Academy of Sc iences .
Armsby Heads New Non-Profit Institute Dr. H enry H . Armsby, former R egistrar, Missour i School of Mines and Metallurgy, has been named President of Capitol Institute of Technicology, Washington, D.C. This new institution of higher education is non-profit and grants a degree o f Associate of Ap· plied Sci ence after successful com plelion of their three-year pr ogram. This program is o ne of the strongest in electronic engineering technology offered in the United States. December 1964
Gridders ShoUl Promise The 1964 Miner football team completed a nine-game season with o ne victory. The r ejuvenated squad com p osed of mostly freshmen dis played promise as the sea son progressed against ex perienced oppo nents . Their only victory was over th e Central Misso uri State Coll ege aggregatio n . The game remained sco reless until the final quarter. Th e Miners managed to score twice o n the mudd y field and gain a 14 to 0 victory. The Min er h a I fb a c k Gasparovic scored b o t h TD 's . Th e results of the season 's games were: Miners 7 Was hington Unive rsity 27 Miners 0 Pittsburg( K ans. ) 24 State Miners 6 U. of T ennessee 26 (Martin Branch) Miners 0 Lincoln Univers ity 73 Miners 12 Kirksv ill e 35 Miners 19 Maryv ille 41 Miners 13 Springfield 49 Miners 14 W arrensbu rg 0 Miners 7 Cape Girardeau 49 K irksville won the MlAA Conference championship with a (5-0) record; Cape finis hed sec 0 n d with a (4-1) mark; Springfield was third with a (3-2) slate; Maryvill e was fourth; the Miners fi.fth, and Warrensb urg , sixth. Only three of the Miner squad will be lost by graduation . They are the Tri-Cap tain s of the 19 64 season ; Dalton W els h , end; Guard R obert K aiser and D onald Bacich, tackle. Good material h as been developed from the squad of fres h man and Ron Lewis, quarterback, and Eugene Ricker , en d, showed excellent promise for next season. The o utstand in g upperclassman , George Gasparovic, is certain to return even stronger than he was this year. George lead the team in yards gained.
ENGINEERS WANTED Chem. Eng!'. or Chemist - Pr efer a person with some knowledge of p lastic mold ing, wh irlcladding of fluid bed processing and organ iC finis hing . H e could be an or ganic or po lymer ch emist wi th 2 or 5 years of experience in
contr o l o r p rocess ing. Refer Fil e N o. 224 . Mining Engr. - On e or tw o yea rs experience in und ergrowld mining . Refer Fil e N o . 225. Junior Min ing Engr. - Interes ted in both domestic and foreign emp loyment. R efer File No. 226. Associat e Mining Engineer - 2-5 yrs . mi ning engineering experience, open pit o r undergro und, is preferred; academ ic ac hi evements may s ubstitute for engineering exper ience . Under 35 yrs. preferred . Refer File No. 227 . Mech. Eng!'. - 5 yea r s of pr od uct design experience in the field of vibrating screen s used in the mining, quarrying o r r oad construction industries . Refer Fi le No. 229. Mech. , Electrical o r Civil En gr. - T o fi ll a job now o pen. Refer File No. 232. E.E., M .E., Met. - For E. Chicago, Indiana plan t. After a s ho rt, intens ive t rain ing program to be moved into management. Mu st be military returnees o r veterans . Refer File N o. 233 . Metallurgist - N eeded by one of the big three auto industries . Refer File No. 234 . Chem. Eng!'. - One or mor e yea rs experience in industry , and qualifications fo r becomillg project leader, fo r p OSItion in development work in Fuel Cells in Research Division. Refer File No . 235. Ceramic Engr. - Pos itions are in Paris, France. W ith at least 5 years expe rience in production of sanitary and white ware. Refer File No. 236 . M et. or Chem. Eng!'. - W ould beconcerned with or e sin tering, charge preparation, the smelting, refining, alloying and casting of zinc metal. R efer File No. 238 . Engineer - Degree plus minim um 2 years experience in design of stru ctural systerns for architect ural projects. Advanced degree preferred. Experience on industrial buildings or parking decks wo uld be helpful. Refer File No. 239 . Met. - Mini mum of two years in met17
allography in alloy steel or iron laboratory. Refer File No. 24l.
duction control. Two to ten years experience. Refer File No. 26l.
Mech. or Civil Engr. - Texas Company. Refer File No. 242.
System Analyst - M. S. or higher degree in mathematics or allied fields . Be familiar with the various types of symbolic programming methods highly desirable. Refer File No. 262.
Chem. or Mech. Engl'. - 5 to 10 yrs. experience, preferably in the brewing, food or fermentation industry, in process and/or design engineering. Refer File No. 246 . Engr. - Area Project Engineer. To serve as consultant. Refer File No. 248. Ceramic Engr. - At least 5 years experience with research and quality control work on clays for industrial uses . Employment would be in the western United States. Refer File No. 252. Market Research Analyst - Minimum of 3 years staff experience as analyst of markets and commercial programs relating to the sale and distribution of industrial equipment, preferably to the power generation, chemical processing, metal working or transportation industries. Refer File No . 254 . M.E., E.E., Ch. Engl'., and Met.One to three years experience, and Electronic Material and Processes. Salary open, depending on experience. Age 25-35. Refer File No. 257. Chem. Engr. , Chem., and Elec. Engr. - Positions for Research, Engineering, and Manufacturing. Some experience necessary. Refer File No. 258. Elec. Engr. - Have openings for 3 E.E. as follows: two Instrument Engineers, requires experience in development, design and maintenance of process controls utilizing principles of electronics, hydraulics, pneumatics and some knowledge of servo-mechanisms. One Electrical Project Engineer - development, design and maintenance of control circuits, AC and DC equipment, electronic drives, and hydro generating equipment. Refer File No. 259.
Metallurgist - B. S. or M. S. Individual should have a desire for "troubleshooting " plant liaison in the area of fabrication with special emphasis in heat treating and/ or machining. Refer File No. 263.
Mr. and Mrs . Donald D. Baker '57 , now have a second son, Damon Dale , born October 7, 1964. Their first son, Daryl Dean, is 3 years old. Don works for Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory. The Bakers ' home address is 2139A 48th Street., Los Alamos, New Mexico.
Mech. Engr. - With 5 years or more product design experience in the field of vibrating screens used in the mining, quarrying or road construction industries. Refer File No. 264.
Ml'. and Mrs. Robert F. Boschert '62, have one son born September 22, 1963. Robert works for Armco Steel Corp. and lives at 915 4th Avenu e, Middletown, Ohio.
BIRTHS Ml'. and Mrs. O. Timken Yager , Jr. '52, announce the . birth of Scott, born in April 1964. This is their fourth child. The father is plant engineer at Baldwin, Ehret, Hill, Inc. , Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. They reside at 30 15 Hemlock Drive, Norristown, Pa. Ml'. and Mrs. Harold M. Gilby '60 , have a sister for their son who is 14 months old. She was born October 9, 1964 . Harold is with the U. S. Army Cor p s of Engineers, Military Construction Branch, Mechanical Engineer, General. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Betts '63, are now proud parents of Brian Allan who was born J Wle 24, 1964. Bruce received his M. S. degree this past October. The Betts ' are now living at 431 Kentucky Avenue, Plainfield, Indiana.
Engineers - Would prefer a young man, between twenty-five and thirty yrs. of age, with an engineering degree for sales representation in Ind ustrial and Cryogenic Gas Department. Refer File No. 260.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy H. Crecelius, J r. '58, have informed us of the birth of Steven Roy, born March 20, 1964. Percy is still a staff member with the Navigators, and works part time in electronics and electrical inspection. Their mailing address is Box 404, Jacksonville, North Carolina.
Industrial Engineering - The nature of the work would involve plant layout, time and motion study, work simplification, materials handling, and pro-
Ml'. an d Mrs. William Koederitz '51, proudly advised the Alumni Office that their sixth son, Jon Andrew, arrived on September 1, 1964. They
18
reside at ION orvel Lane, Stamford , Conn. William is Financial Analyst for the Mobile Oil Company, with its headquarters at 150 East 42nd Street, New York, New York .
Mr. and Mrs. J oseph]. Consoletti '63, announced the birth of a daughter Debra Ann born September 23, 1964, to join two brothers, Michael D ean and James J oseph. Joseph is a Production Metallurgist for the Central Foundry Division of General Motors. His address is 1515 N. Robinson, Danville, Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis E. Mason '58 , have a girl now. Marie Annette was born on September 1, 1964. Dennis is a Technical Writer-Editor for the Allison Division of General Motors Corporation. Mr. and Mrs. H. J ohn Meyer III '60 ann 0 u n c e the arrival of their fourth child, a boy, Peter Vincent on September 17, 1964. H e joins a family of one o lder sister Margaret Ann and two older brothers Phillip John and Paul David. The Meyers ' live at 2941 San Marcos Drive, Fort Worth , Texas. Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Smith '63, have a sister for their 2 year old daughter Lisa Ann. J ennifer Lee was born October 16, 1964 . Robert is working on a Ph. D. in Statistics at the University of Missouri under an assistant instructorship. They reside at 1103 T andy, Columbia, Missouri. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Steffan '56, have announced the arrival of Robert Eugene on September 3, 1964. He joins his 2 year old brother, Brian. Kenneth is department head of the
MSM Alumnus
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Guidance Systems Department, of the Aerospace Corporation in El Secundo , California. Their address is 13306 Hansworth Ave. , Hawthorne, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Borman '59, have informed us of the birth of their first child Michael Christopher, born May 21, 1964 . J ohn is a Field Service Supervisor for the AC Spark Plug Division of General Motors in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry David Vie '60, announce the birth of their third child, Julie, born February, 1964. Jerry has been appointed Pilot Plant Superintendent of the Mallinckrodt Chern. Wo r ks, St. Charles , Missouri. They reside at 2630 W. Adams, St. Charles. Mr. and Mrs R ober t H. Erskine '50, informed the Alum.ni Office of the birth of a daughter on January 30, 1964. Robert is the Manager of Vreden burghs ' Steel Division and w as made director of Peter Vredenburgh Lum ber Co. & Wall Steel Bldg., Inc. on January 1,1964.
MARRIAGES Rother - Schwerdtmann
Mr. John Henry Rother '57 and Miss Ann Marie Schwerdtmann were married on Saturday, September 12, 1964 , at the Oak Hill Presbyterian Church in St. Louis, Missouri.
fo rm er director of th e Bureau of Standards for the Ci ty of Los Angeles, and a retired exec utive secretary of the A rizona Agg r egate Associati on . H e was a men"lber of the Society of Profess ional Engineer s of Phoenix , the MSM Alumni ASSOCiation , and past master of a Masonic Lodge in Los Angeles. Survivors include his widow, lone C; a da ughter, Mrs. Elean or Y. Maurseth , of New York , N. Y ; and four sisters . Carl L. Wagner, Jr .
Carl L Wagner, Jr. '49, s uffer ed a fatal h eart attack Octob er 24 , 1964 . Carl was an engineer at McDonnell Aircraft Corporation, St. Louis , Mo. , at the time of his untimely death. He was 3 7 years old . He is survived by his wido w wh o res ides at 225 Nelda Avenue, K irkwood 22, Missouri . George R. Reading
George R Reading ' 38 . T he Alumni Office has been advised of George 's death that occu rred J uly 27 , 1964.
A lumni Personals 19 2 2 W alker E. Case, a veteran employee of American Telephone and Telegraph Company and now senio r engineer , will retir e in April 1965. His retirement address will be 3915 Woodcrest Drive, Florissant, Missouri.
DEATHS Dwight R. Hutchenson
Dwight Ralph Hutchenson '61. Mail has been returned from the Adjutant General Cas u alty Section, Headquarters , United States Army, Europe, verifYing the death of this alumnus. He nry F. Adams
Henry Farnum Adams ' 12, died October 12, 1964 . He had been confined in a hospital in Santa Barbara, California. His death was attributed to leukem ia. He resided at 2663 Tallant Road , Santa Barbara, California. Joh n T. Youn g
Jo hn T. Yo ung ' 17 , died October 10 , 1964 in Phoenix , Arizona. He was December 1964
19 3 0 Lt. Co l. Frank W. B a i le y USAF (RET) is with the District of Colu m bia, Department of Sanitatio n , Water Pollution Control Plant. He is employed as a General Engineer. H is address is 7623 Arbroath Drive, Do rchester Estate, Clinton, Maryland.
194 1 Robert K. Boyd was on the campus in October. He is area manager for Atkinson Company, Long Beach, California. Bob 's son is a student in Junior College in California, and h e may return to the Rolla campus to complete his degree. He wo uld be a great help to our basketball team as he is 6 ft. p lus, and excels in this sp ort. Bob 's address in Long Beach is 5554 E. 6th St.
1 942 Ralph 1. Neubert has been appo inted to the newly created position of area director for Latin An"lerica in Monsanto Com pany's International Division. H e has been serving as manager of p lanning for the company 's Agricultural Division. He resides at 1817 H igh Oak , St. Louis, Mo. Stanley M. Kulifay, Research Group Leader , Monsanto Company's Central Research Department, has bee n appointed to Monsanto's Agricultural Division in the same capacity. lUexander L Stewart is now Sales Manager of Dry Chemicals and Food Proces sing Equipment Systems , of lUlis Chalmers Manufacturing Company. H e lives at 8422 Jackson Park Blvd., Milwaukee 13, Wisconsin. Kung Ping Wang works fo r the U. S. B ureau of Mines and is Chief, East Europe-Far East Specialist. He also wor ks part-time as an assistant to the Science Advisor, Department of I nterior, on U . S. , Japan Technical Cooperation in Natural Resources. Robert A. Pohl has been appointed manager of manufacturing selvices for Mons anto Company 's International Di· visio n after serving as assistant director of its former manufacturing depart· ment.
1 93 9 Edmund L Claridge h as moved again. He is wo rking for Shell Developm ent Houston and is section h ead for the crude o il prod uction research. Edmu nd 's new address is 5 439 Paisley, Houston , Texas , 77 0 35.
1 943 lUbert D eValve has been in Alaska since 195 3. He was then with the U .S. Army Engin eer D istrict. In 1959, he was transferred to the Federal Aviation Agency. Since May he has been 19
MSM
ALUMNI
PERSONALS
engaged in field work and design on airports damaged or displaced by the earthquake last March. He has been serving as Resident Engineer on a new airstrip at Old Harbor, a native fishing village on the east side of Kodiak Island. Albert was married October 27, 1961 to the former Miss Lulu Clark of Georgetown, Idaho. The DeValves came through the earthquake last spring without too much personal loss, but some personal inconvenience caused by the general uncertainty and doubt as to the future. The FAA had to move out of their almost new eight story headquarters for five months while the building was being repaired or rebuilt or cleared away. Two fourteen story apartment buildings remain unoccupied as their future is uncertain. The future of the slide areas is also uncertain. The final decisions remain with a number of government agencies. Most of the people and organizations have decided to stay and are rebuilding better than ever. Albert's address is 1531 Kinnikinnick Street, Anchorage, Alaska. William H. Bassett has been elected executive vice president of Stupp Corporation, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Stupp Corporation is a leading manufacturer of high-yield strength, steel line pipe for the oil and gas industry.
1 949
Ralph C. Axsom has joined Monsanto Company's Organic Chemicals Division as a marketing trainee serving With Battenfeld Grease & Oil Company, Merriam, Kansas. William L. Mason is with North American Aviation and resides at 1630 West Oak, Fullerton, California. The Masons have four children, three girls and a boy. Lloyd Pollish, underground superintendent, for the Anaconda Company is now involved in sinking a shaft at a location that will become the site of the first open-pit copper mine near Tucson, Arizona. Pollish spent 11 years at Anaconda's El Salvador copper mine in Chile. Lloyd lives at 2826 E. Stratford Drive, Tucson.
195 0 Warren H. Johnson has received a promotion to Field Engineer Supervisor with the Portland Cement Asso-
W an en H. Johnson 1 945
Earl M. Shank, Euopawijk, 28; Geel, Belgium, Union Carbide Nuclear Division - Union Carbide CorpOl'ation, is United States Technical Advisor to the Eurochemic Company.
1 947
Gilbert]. Carafiol was a campus visitor in November. Gil is Vice President, Lec B. Wei I & Walter B. Moses, Inc., Consulting Engineers, 539 E. Town St., Columbus, Ohio . We were glad to have Gil 's current address again as he has been "nlissing " in the alumni records since 1958. The Carafiols ' residence address is 2413 Bexley Park Road, Bexley, Ohio.
20
ciation. His current address is 1855 Lay Street, Monterey Park, California. Victor Hinch started working for Roots-Connersville Blower Company in June. His pOSition is Development Engineer. Victor moved to 40 West Sixth Street, Connersville, Indiana in September.
195 1 Robert Zinke is one of the princi-
pals in a new pett-oleum exploration and development organization -]. W. Hunt & Associates located in the Wilco Building, Midland, Texas. He was formerly with W. M. and A. P. Fuller of Fort Worth, Texas, in their oil and gas operations. Zinke has been in Midland since 1951 when he accepted a position as geologist for the Honolulu Oil Corporation. After three years with that concern he became district geologist for Monterey Oil Co. He joined Fullers two years later as district geologist. From 1959 until 1962 he was a partner in Davis and Zinke, independent geologists. He returned to Fuller at the end of that period as head of its geological department. Henry A. Sheeley is now employed at the Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation, Ravenswood, West Virginia, with residence at 1702 Romany Drive, West Miffin, Pennsylvania. Robert E. Vansant was presented the Western Chapter, Missouri Society of Professional Engineers' "Young Engineer of the Month" award at the Chapter's monthly meeting in October. Bob is presently employed by Black & Veatch Consulting Engineers as a specifications writer and is attending Law School at nights at the UniverSity of Missouri at Kansas City. He received his Civil Engineering degree at MSM in 195 1 and received the K ansas City Section of ASCE student award for that year. During the years 1951, '52, and '53, he served in the U. S. Army as an officer in an Engineer Construction Battalion. Included among his community activities are: Board of Governors Citizens Association, Board of Managers of Linwood YMCA, the Army Reserves, where he holds the rank of Captain. He is a member of the Linwood Methodist Church and teaches Sunday School. The honor societies to which he belongs are: Tau Beta Pi, Chi Epsilon, Pi Kappa Phi, Blue Key and Theta Tau. Bob is a member of many technical societies and has served the Kansas City Chapter of ASCE as Committee Chairman and a member of the Board of Directors. He is a Registered Professional Engi-
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neer in Misso uri , a member of MSPE and active in the committees of the Western Chapter.
tion " , at the 12th Annual Midwest Solid State Conference held at the K ansas State University, Manhattan , October 16-1 7.
195 2
Richard 1. Kaiser is a full-time graduate student at Stanford University , and part-time cons ultant for Collins Radio Company.
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Francis S. Basler is owner of the A-M Construction Company, 7817 Clymer D r ive, St. Louis, Miss ouri. Francis started this general contracting company in July 1964 . The Baslers have two children , Dennis and Jane. Jack K. Wade is in Mangla, W est Pakistan working for ManglaDam Contractors. He had a short visit with Amed Ali '53, Deputy Minister of Mines, Kabul Afghanistan in SeptembeLJack 's address is 610 4th Ave., Mangla, West Pakistan.
Anthony J Berenato is senior project engineer, Emerson Electric Co., St. Lo uis, Mo. Berenatos ' were formerly in Sharon , Pennsylvania, moving to Florissant! Missouri, last March. Their address is 35 30 Dwyer Lane. The two c hi I d r en in the Berenato family are Theresa Marie, age 4 years, and Gregory Gerard 1)6 years.
Robert C. Lange has been promoted to the position of Division Superintendent for the Central Division of Loffland Brothers Company. He will continue to have headquarters in Oklahoma City , Oklahoma, where he formerly served as Division Engineer. He joined Lof£land after graduation and he has worked as Driller, T oolpusher and Drilling Engineer in the Gulf Co ast, Permian and Mid-Continent areas. Raymond 1. Hussey has accepted a pOSition as an analytical chemist with Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, Indiana based pharmaceutical firm . Be-
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Rodn ey E. Gilbreath is an engineer with the Westinghouse Electric Corp. in East Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Mrs . Gilbreath is the former Evelyn Louise Hickox. They have one son, David 6 years old. The Gilbreaths reside at 82 Sierra Drive, Pittsburgh . Joseph N. Muscovalley has been appointed Division Contract Manager of the Permian Division of Lof£land Brothers Company w ith headquarters in Odessa, Texas. Prior to his jo ining Lof£land Brothers in 1963, he worked as Chief Drilling Engineer of the Great Western Drilling Company. For the past year , he served as Division Drilling Engineer. Dr. James G. Mullen joined the faculty of Purdue University this fa ll as assistant professor in the Physics Department. Dr. Mullen presented a paper at the Chicago meeting of the American Physical Society, October 23 -24, entitled, "Effect of Ion Size in Diffusion in Alkali Halides". Dr. Mullen is co-author of this paper. Dr. Edward N. Sickagus, now an ass istant profess or of Physics at the University of Denver , presented a paper entitled, " Surface Spikes - Accelerated Crystal Growth During SublimaDecember 1964
1 951 Edward B. Campen, wife and daughter are n ow residing at 2835 West-
Edwm-d B. Campen
woo d D r ive, Billings , Montana. Ted is now Sales Engineer in the District Office of Schlumberger Well surveying Corporation. Other alumni residing in Billings are: Cliff Blackstun '57 and Guy Wiggs '57 . Jo hn Mothers head, Jr. has been transferred by the Western Electric Co., Inc., from Greensboro, North Carolina to the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Whippany, New Jersey, where he is with their Defense Act ivities Division to work o n the Nii<:e X. His new residence add ress is 25 Appletree Lane, Morris Plains , N ew Jersey .
Raymond L. Hussey
fo r e joining Eli Lilly and Company , Ray was employed as an analytical chemist for the Pet Milk Company in Greenville, Illinois . He is a member of Phi Kappa Phi, scholarship h onor society; Sigma Pi Sigma, physics honor society; and Tau Beta Pi, engineering honor society. Ray and his wife Patricia, live at 5208 Sunnymeade Lane in Indianapolis.
195 8 Major Niels H. Lund was the winner of the Newman Medal , the highest military engineering award offered annually by The Society of American Military Engineers to a member of the Directorate of Civil Engineering, U. S. Air Force. Major Lund is cited for his outstanding performance as the Air Force project officer directing design and cons tructi on of an important NATO program. This service was performed while Major Lund was assign21
MSM M S M
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ed as the Assistant Chief, Construction Operations Division, DCS/ Civil Engineering , Headquarters USAF Europe. Major Lund is now at the Armed Forces Staff College, Norfolk, Virginia. Ronald P. Grebing has retumed from an assignment in Libya with International Exploration. He has been there for two years and expects to take another forei~;n assignment. He uses 4156 Tyrolean, St. Louis, Missouri, as his address due to his mobile employment.
195 9 Victor F. Spruill has been assigned to the post of executive officer of the U. S. Army 's 24th Engineer Group. Prior to this, Major Spruill was deputy chief of the Installations Division, Office of the G-S, at Headquarters of the Army Security Agency in Arlington, Virginia.
1 960 Larry W. Dickey has been awarded the U. S. Army 's Commendation Medal for "exceptionally lTl.eritorious service " with th e Army Missile Support Command at R edstone Arsenal, Alabama . H e is a mechanical engineer on the technical staff of Bell Teleph one Laboratories at Whippany, N. ]. Mr. Dickey won the medal for his work in the Standards Engineering and Evaluation Laboratory and as technical operations officer in the o ffic e of the Chief of the Calibration Center at Redstone between March, 196 3, and Septemb er of this year. H e served as a lieuten ant in the Ordnance Corps at Red sto ne for two years . In making the presentation , Charles F. Wiebusch , Exec utive Director of th e Laboratori es' Outside ¡Plant and Under water System s Divis ion stated , "Thro ug h his exceptio nal en ergy, technical co mpetence, and initiative, 1 st Lt. Dickey was instrum en tal in bring ing ab o ut a n umber of impr ovem ents. Am o ng oth er things, h e conducted an extensive and detailed electr o magn etic en ergy enviro nment s urvey of nu mer o u s locations; initiated 22
a dust control study which utilized his proposals for the minimization of dust in all areas; recommended guidelines for a microwave test console to obtain greater calibration efficiency, and evaluated an advanced microwave attenuator technique which greatly extended the state of the art " .
Gene L. Scofield is senior layout man in product design engineeringChevrolet t Engineering Center, Warren, Michigan. The Scofields have three sons: Jeffrey, 5 )6 , Larry, 4 years, and Gregory, age 1)6 years. Their Warren address is 24759 Cunn ingham.
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Jerry Lee Cadden has accepted a position with Union Carbide Corporation in their Oak Ridge, Tennessee, plant. Victor Hoffman is now employed by Union Carbide and Carbon Company and resides at 420 Mesa Court, Grand Junction, Colorado. He has been attending the University of Arizona working toward his Ph. D. in G eology. Edward E. Walton is Manager of P. T. Department of the Atlanta, Georgia and Knoxville, Tenn., branches of Ingersoll-Rand Company. His addres s is 2029 Chesterfield Drive, Decatur , Georgia. John H. Gustafson formerly associated with the Hawthom Company, New Haven, Missouri, as aseniorchemist, has been appointed Senior Dye
Joh11 P.
Gust afson
Chemist in Chemstrand 's Applicatio n Research and Service D epartment, D ecatur , Alabama. He r eceived his M. S. degr ee fr o m the R o lla campus . H e is a m emb er of Wh o's Who in Am erican Colleg es and Univers ities, American Chemical Society an d has had several tech n ical papers published . H e and his wife, Barbar a, and three children live in D ecatu r at 121 7 Tho mas Drive,
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196 2 Craig A. Valentine has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force upon graduation fro m Officers Training School at Lackland
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AFB, Texas . Lt. Valentine, selected for OTS t h r 0 ugh competitive examination , is being as s igned to Headquarters , Aeronautical Chart and Information Center , St. Louis, Missouri, for duty. ACIC prod uces aeronautical charts and maps required for U. S. global aircraft operations and space missions. Donald N . O verall , h is wife Gini , and the tw o children have relocated in the east , 3 30 T exas Ave. , Bridgep o rt, Connecticut. Mrs. G e 0 r g i n a Mo re' Ov erall r eceived her degree in Metallurgical Engineering in 1963. D o n is e m p l oy e d as a Metallurgist with Handy & H arman , a leading producer of preciOUS m etal s heet, strip and wir e, brazing products and electrical contacts . Prev io usly, D o n was with G ranite City Steel Com pany. Mrs . Ov erall h as not enter ed the metallurgical eng in eerin g profession yet but plan s are in the offing .
and h for di: maneu II, he en '6 retriev the Pt outh durinl bridgt float t bell, J pense! maneu pilot.
A. the N( has al gist w ing al Oroya
Edw in H. W edi g has info rmed u s that h e accepted a pos itio n with Olin Mathieson Chemical Co rp o ration as a
MSM Al umnus
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ALUMNI
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metallurgical engineer in their technical department. Ed's new mailing address is 2500 Wedgwood Drive West, Florissant, Missouri. Michael Maksym icz is working for General D ynamicsjElectronics Corporation of R oches ter, New York, where he is employed as a Quality Control Engineer. Michael is being transferred to H of, Germany, and will be a Field Engi neer Representative for the company. His family will join him after the Christmas h olidays. His ad dress will be General D ynamicsjElectr onics, c/ o 69 15th S.S., APO 684, New York, New York. Lt. Henry P. Duvall '62 is assistant operations officer of the 39th Engr. Bn. which is acting in dir ect support of exercise air assault II. He has been in South Carolina since July 24,1964 and hopes to return to Ft. Campbell for discharge soon . While touring the mane uve r area for exercise air as sault II, he ran across 2;Lt. James Van Buren '63. Jim was in the process of retrieving 450' of float bridge from the Pee Dee River north of Cheraw, South Carolina. The rive r r ose 15ft. during the night and isolated the bridge. Jim is as signed to the 5 5 rd float bridge co. , stationed at Ft. Campbell, Kentucky. Also 1;Lt. Gary T r ippensee '62 is reported to be in the maneuver ar ea. Gary is a " mohawk" pilot.
c/ o Cerro De Pasco, Corporation, LaOroya, Peru, South America. William R . Leininger was an Alumni Office vis ito r in N ovember. He has just been discharged from the service and is going to wo rk for American Steel Fo undrys, Inc., Granite City; Illin ois. Bill 's last assignment was at Ft. Bliss, Texas. His address now will be 6017 Old Collinsville R oad , Bellevill e, Illin ois.
Don
with lucer
h e was promoted to Chief Chemist. His present address is Sipes International Paint Mfg. Co., P. O. Box 3300, Beirut, Lebanon. Mohamm ed is a mem-
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HELP US KEEP YOUR ADDRESS CURRENT
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If yo ur add ress has changed, complete and tear ou t this slip and mail it imm ed iately to MSM Alumni Association, Rolla , Mo. Thanks.
i
N ame ____ ._. _________ ____. ________ ... ____._. _____ ._. __ __ ___. ________ ____ .__________ . ___ . ___._ ... __ .. _. _.... ____ ___ _____.
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My new a ddress is _._. ___ .... __ ._. ____ .__ . ____ .___ ._ .. _____. __ . __ . ______ ____ __. __.. __ _.. _.. _....... __ . ____ ._._
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My Company or B usiness Is _._. __ ... __ ._._... ___ .... _.._._ .. _. ____ .. _... ... _____ ._._ .. _. __ _____ __ ___ .
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And My Title Is __ _____ _____. ______ . ________ __..__ ___ __ .___ . _______ . __ ._ .. ______.. __ ______ ____ .. _____ . __ _._. _.
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Here's Some News for the MSM
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A. Sousa-Poza until now was with the Noranda group at Gaspe, Quebec, has accepted a p OSition as metallurgi st with Cerro d e Pasco in their Sm elting and Refining D epartment at LaOroya, Per u. His mailing address is
ALUMNUS:
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M aha ill ill ed Sami Rifa i
1 963 Mohammed Sami Rifai who received his M. S. in Chemistry, joined the Chemical Coating D ivis ion of Hanna Paint Mfg ., of Col umbus, Ohio . H e then transferred to Sipes International Paint Mfg. Co., in October 1963, as
Gini,
,cated idge· gina ee in
Research and D evelopment Chemist. Sipes Mfg. Co., is an affiliate of Hanna 'Pain Mfg. Co. with distribution aU over the Middle East. In August 1964,
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HELP THE ALUMNI
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ASSOCIATION
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ALUMNI
PERSONALS
ber of both the American Chemical Society and the Lebanese Chemical Society. Edmund O. Koch has received an appointment as sales engineer, Industrial Divisions, San Francisco District of the Jeffrey Manufacturing Company, 1862 Rollins Road, Burlingame, California. After graduation he joined jeffrey 's sales engineering training program. Ed and his wife Ann have established their new residence in San Mateo, California. Joel Philhours, now a graduate student in PhYSics at Kansas State U niversity, presented a paper at the Midwest Solid State Conference at Kansas State University, October 16-17. Mr. Philhours was co-author with G. 1. Hall. The title of the paper was, "The Molecular Field Approximation " . Ronald S. Robertson was recently promoted to Associate Engineer, Product Engineering at the International Business Machines Corporation in Endicott, New York. Mr. Robertson resides at 5071,6 Exchange Street, Endicott, New York. Henry D. Hurter is employed by Washington State Highway Commission and is wo r king on the Tukwila Interchange (the largest interchange in the state) . Since leaving MSM, Henry married Miss Linda Kay Moore in Glacier National Park, Montana on Aug-
ust 24, 1963. Their home was blessed on May 6, 1964 with their first son . They named him Scott Donald. Their current residential address is 821 "P" Street, Renton, Washington.
assigned at the U. S. Naval Ship Missile Systems Engineering Station, Port Hueneme, California, and resides at 950 So . "]" St., Apt. 204, Oxnard, California.
David 1. Frost was promoted to Project Engineer of Owens-Illinois Inc. , and was transferred from the Alton, Illinois plant to the Bridgeton, New Jersey plant. He is enjoying his new assignment very much. David now lives at 134 W. Commerce, Bridgeton, New Jersey. John A. Reagon is attending the University of Wisconsin on a Ford Foundation Grant and is working toward a Ph . D. in Electrical Engineering. John lives at 60 2 H. Eagle Heights, Madison, Wisconsin.
, I I I I
196 4
John 1. Melzer is employed with Western Electric Company and is now
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MSM ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Kenneth Conley works for Sandia Corporation in Albuquerque, Ne w Mexico, and is also enrolled as a graduate student in the Department of Electrical Engineering at the Univers ity of New Mexico.
'51 % i1. 5M , fwlla .
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Tran Khanh Van has returned to Vietnam and is employed by the Bureau of Mines . Van was awarded highest hon ors in the clas s, of 1964 as having the highest average grade. Van has a brother who is interested in attending UMR. Van 's address is 166 Cu-Xa Le ¡Dai Hanh, Phutho, Saigon, Vietnam .
MISSOURI
ROLLA
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Timothy O. Brown is with Dale E. Caruther's, consulting engineering firm, Gorham , Maine. Timothy an d Miss Heather A. Halkyard were married November 1, 1963 and they have a daughter Kimbalie 1., born July 29 , 1964. Their Gorham addres s is 15 Lower Maple Street. John O. Farmer III, has received a promotion to 1st Lieutenant, U. S. . Army . He is platoon leader in Company C of the loth Engineer Battalion near Kitzingen, G ermany. H e entered the Army in March 1963. His address is lOth Engr. 3rd Inf. Div., APO 36 , New York , N. Y.
Anthony C. Tennissen, Assistant Professor in the Geology Department of the Lamar State College of Technology, recently obtained x-ray diffraction and spectrographic equipmen t on a matching grant from NSF. He will use the equipment for undergraduate demonstrations and fo r a course in x-ray methods . It is the only x-ray diffraction unit in Beaumont, and they are very proud of Lamar Tech for obtaining it. The proposal to NSF was writ. ten by A. C. Tennissen and the total cost was $32,000 .
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Ronald S. Robertson is an Associate Engineer with the International Business Machines, Inc., Endicott, New York. He and his wife, Lucia Ann, reside at 5071,6 Exchange Avenue, Endicott, N. Y.
Dr. Norbert Vermaut, who received his Ph. D . in Metallurgy, has been e IT1 p l oy e d by the Chile Exploration Company, Chuquicamata, Chile, South America . MSM Alumnus