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Zach Messitte’s presidential portrait installed

A portrait of Ripon College’s 13th president, Zach Messitte, has joined portraits of other previous presidents in the North Reading Room of Lane Library. Messitte served as president from 20122021.

“I wanted something that was very different” from the more formal portraits of previous presidents,” Messitte said. As a longtime admirer of the work of Professor of Art Rafael Francisco Salas, Messitte asked Salas to create the portrait.

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“It was an honor and a pleasure to work on this painting,” Salas says. “The Messitte family owned examples of my artwork, as well as that of other local artists, and I was excited to say yes to the project. Zach and I worked together to find a composition that included one of his favorite places in Ripon, the Ceresco Prairie Conservancy.”

Messitte is depicted standing casually in the prairie right behind the president’s house at 1 Merriman Lane. He wears his signature Ripon scarf.

“During the course of my work, I also wanted to include a biographical note, a detail that was even more specific to President Messitte’s time at Ripon,” Salas says. “Messitte began the tradition of handing out commemorative coins to incoming first-year students. I was always struck by the symbolism of this, so I included a coin in the right-hand corner of the painting, tucked into the grass of the prairie.”

Messitte says, “I am thrilled with Rafael’s portrait and touched that he included the presidential coin in the prairie grass. I’ve had family and friends who say that he captured the way I stand and tilt my head, I think the scarf is unique and, of course, I love the clouds. They are really his signature.”

Elda Emma Anderson, Class of 1922: Atomic bomb and its aftermath

Elda Emma Anderson did critical work on the development of the atomic bomb that would be used to end World War II, then worked the rest of her life to help to develop a new scientific field with the goal to better understand and minimize harm from radiation.

She was born Oct. 5, 1899, in Green Lake, Wisconsin. At Ripon, she studied physics and mathematics and participated in YWCA, Latin Club, Women’s League and Math Club, and she served as an assistant in physics and a Department Fellow in mathematics. She received her master’s degree and Ph.D. in physics from the University of Wisconsin.

Anderson was dean of physics, chemistry and mathematics from 1924-1927 at Estherville Junior College in Iowa, where she also taught chemistry; and principal of the high school in Menasha, Wisconsin, from 1927-1929. In 1929 she became a professor in the new physics department of Milwaukee-Downer College, which later was merged with Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. She became head of the department in 1934.

She had been researching spectroscopy, the study of the absorption and emission of light and other radiation, and was recruited in late 1941 to work in the Office of Scientific Research and Development at Princeton University. She began work on the

Manhattan Project, the code name for the U.S. government’s secret project to develop an atomic bomb to help speed the end of World War II.

She was transferred to Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory in New Mexico in 1943 where a team of scientists worked closely together and in secret to develop an atomic bomb quickly before Germany was able to do so. She said the three years at Los Alamos were the most hectic of her life, working up to 18 hours a day every day except for Christmas.

Anderson produced the lab’s first pure sample of uranium-235, a key component to the development of the bomb. She was present at the Trinity Event, the explosion of the first atomic bomb in the New Mexico desert, July 16, 1945. Intent on the flash of light and billows of smoke, she’d forgotten the sound that would follow and was jolted when the massive sound of the explosion reached her a few minutes later.

She returned to teaching in 1947, but her research in atomic physics made her aware of the harm radiation could do to living things. A new field of science, health physics, had been established to study and prevent the effects of radiation on human health.

In 1949, Anderson became the first chief of education for the Health Physics Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee.

Anderson published “Manual of Radiological Protection for Civil Defense” in 1950, helped establish a master’s degree program in health physics at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and organized international courses in Sweden, Belgium and India through the World Health Organization.

She held several positions with the Health Physics Society, established in 1955, and served as the secretary and then chairman of the American Board of Health Physics, a professional certifying agency created by the Health Physics Society.

The Elda E. Anderson Award is given annually by the Health Physics Society to an outstanding young health physicist.

She died April 17, 1961, of leukemia, a blood cell cancer, and breast cancer, which may have been exacerbated by her work in radiation. She was 61.

JAYE ALDERSON COLLEGE EDITOR

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