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1 Sixty-nine are graduated at winter term Eighteen receive bachelor of arts, five receive bachelor of science, one receives master of didactics, remainder receive diplomas from departments; description of ceremony; Rollo L. Lyman gives address; list of graduates.
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2 Iowa children learn to sing by new plan Explanation of music teaching method developed by Professor Charles Fullerton; photo.
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3 Dr. Seerley is hall of fame elector Will be elector for 1930 New York University hall of fame.
4 Reconstruction work reveals romance Remodeling reveals signature of faculty wife on old blackboard.
5 Dean Barzille W. Merrill Will conduct tour of Europe.
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6 Help, not punishment, is aim of new course Committee attempts to assist students who have difficulty in school.
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7 College holds first speech clinic English Department inaugurates speech clinic available to all students; conference held for superintendents and teachers who must work with students with speech problems.
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8 Thirty debaters stage ambitious program Season wrap-up; list of team members.
9 Cecilians give concert Program for 41st annual concert; Orchesis will present ballet features.
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10 Martin memorial project grows Will begin to raise money when legal matters are settled.
11 Seerley Foundation Fund report.
12 Campanile Fund Fund report.
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13 Educational conference is great success Report on 13th Annual Conference on Problems of Elementary Education.
14 Writers' Club organized Group forms to encourage young writers.
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15 New four-year music course established Description of new course and opportunities for group work and study in music; photo.
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16 Younger students enroll at college Median age for women in fall was 19; median age for men was 20; older students attend in summer term.
17 Faculty attend national meeting President and seven faculty attend NEA meeting.
18 Traffic dangers studied by club Macy Campbell Club studies dangers to rural children.
19 College to have first flag Committee appointed to work on design for flag.
20 Tutor Ticklers is new tradition First all-campus vaudeville show presented; proceeds go to Student Loan Fund.
21 Debaters argue for merchants Students debate installment buying in front of local Commercial Club.
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22 A. A. U. W. sponsors fun fest Presents entertainment including vaudeville, dancing, concessions, and side shows.
23 The recently organized Cedar Falls chapter AAUP Cedar Falls chapter organizes; twenty-five faculty are members.
24 Cradle Song to be Commencement play Hazel Strayer will direct play.
25 Professor speaks at Legion meet Professor Robinson speaks in Des Moines.
26 New bulletin reveals changes Catalogue includes new rules, courses, and curricula; special sections on new music curriculum and extension service.
27 Two thousand 2064 students enrolled in spring 1930.
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28 Alice O. Gordon Receives M. A. degree from Columbia University.
29 Ruth A. Adsit Opens teachers agency in Cherokee.
30 Fritzel honored as best cager Melvin Fritzel named number one player on ISTC basketball team.
31 Faculty and alumni on association programs Roster of participants and presentations in ISTA meeting.
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32 System and order College buys new file cabinets and other office equipment.
33 Gilchrist Hall transformed Remodeling will accommodate College Eye and News Bureau.
34 New band room without equal New music room put together in Central Hall for band and orchestra.
35 Professors like "light" fiction Brief description of library collections and facilities.
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36 New style "Alumnus" meets approval Selection of letters about new magazine format.
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37 Track squad ready for hard season Season preview; photo.
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38 College "swat kings" ready to swing clubs Baseball season preview; photo.
39 Ends college career Dave McCuskey honored as best football player on 1929 squad; photo.
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40 Cagers win second in conference honors Basketball season wrap-up; team finishes with 11-1 record; photo.
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41 Mat men place in A. A. U. meet Wrestling season wrap-up.
42 Letters and numeral awarded Roster of those who won letters and numerals for winter sports.
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43 Forest C. Ensign Professor of education at the University of Iowa, and Mrs. Ensign (Lucy Smith) travelled to Los Angeles, where he was a member of the staff of the University of Southern California for eight weeks last summer.
44 Rev. Don M. Gury Will be Rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Watertown, Wisconsin. Mr. Gury is a graduate in the Class of 1929 from a three-year course in theology at Nashotah Theological Seminary, Nashotah, Wisconsin.
45 Etta Shaffner Gillin John Gillin, son of Etta Shaffner Gillin, was selected as a member of the Logan Archeological Expedition which will take him on a six month trip in Africa. His father is a professor at the University of Wisconsin.
46 Mrs. Homer Eber Cooper The former Clara Chassell, is now a resident of Richmond, Kentucky. Her husband is dean of the Teachers College at Richmond and has recently published an address on the subject "The Next Step in Teacher Training in Kentucky" in Kentucky School Journal.
47 Mrs. L. C. Cotton The former Lucy J. Harris and family, formerly of Reseda, California have moved to Pacific Palisades.
48 Martha Currie and Neva B. Wilson Martha Currie, primary teacher at Taber, and Neva B. Wilson, who is now teaching at Ogden, Utah, will return to the college next summer to continue work for their degrees according to G. W. Walters, head of the Education Department.
49 Karl Dubbert Is to have his two piano arrangement of an orchestral waltz from Schakowsky's "Nutcracker Suite" published by the Summy Publishing Company of Chicago in April. He studied under Rose Lena Ruegnitz, professor of piano at the college.
50 Le Clair H. Eells Sales analyst with the United Fruit Company; has been transferred from Macon, Georgia to Des Moines; now a specialist in the production and distribution of bananas and is in charge of the educational service in regard to the fruit.
51 Clara Attig Has been a teacher in Gary, Indiana, for the past five years; now teaching at the Edison school, Waterloo, Iowa. She is taking the place of Florence Bente who has resigned.
52 Miriam Whitney The resignation of Miriam Whitney, second grade teacher at Edison school became effective January 27, and her place was taken by Helene Conn, for the past three years a member of the public school staff of Grinnell, Iowa.
53 William Julius Berry Professor Berry is now a member of the faculty of the University of California at Los Angeles, where he is an associate professor of geography. His residence is in West Hollywood, California.
54 Rev. F. W. Bruins The Reverend Bruins, pastor of the Community Congregational Church at Mobridge, South Dakota, and Mrs. Bruins (Ruth W. Ballou) visited Chicago in the latter part of January.
55 Alice O. Cain Alice O. Cain, formerly residing at Macomb, Illinois, left for Chicago in January on her way to Columbus, Mississippi, where she is a voice teacher in a girls' college.
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56 W. O. Reed Reed, and W. Walter Wilson were appointed by Governor Hammill as members of the state committee attending the funeral of the late Speaker of the House, Luther V. Carter, of New Providence.
57 Godfrey Messer Has received his M. S. degree at the Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa. He wrote his thesis on "Organization of an Industrial Art Course for a Typical Iowa High School."
58 Colonel George H. McManus Colonel McManus, who has been in the Panama Canal Zone for the past three years, is now stationed at Ft. Banks, Boston.
59 Dorothy Owen Has been appointed to fill the place of Delia Kolling, of the Physical Education Department at the College, who is ill at her home in York, Nebraska.
60 George B. Phelps Contests the statement made in the January Alumnus wherein Dean Leslie I. Reed received prizes for being the oldest graduate. He maintains he was a student at the opening of the State Normal College in September 1876.
61 Frances M. Hersey The daughter of S. F. Hersey, professor of physics at the College, is now assistant superintendent of a new hospital just opened in Wauseon, Ohio. Last June she received the M. A. degree from Columbia University.
62 Dr. John D. Lyon Now located in the Medical Arts Building, Nicollet at Ninth, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
63 A. C. Lyon Manager of the "Diamond Double L' outfit at Jenny Lake, Wyoming. He conducts tours and pack trips through the Grand Teton and Jackson Hole country in the Yellowstone National Park.
64 Mrs. Frank A. Muirhead The Muirheads are now residing in Iowa City. He is a professor in the Department of Journalism at the University of Iowa. Mrs. Muirhead is the former Pearl Dushek.
65 Cap Earl Miller Professor of agricultural economics at the North Dakota Agricultural College, Fargo, North Dakota, is president of the State Society of the Sons of American Revolution. He has published a bulletin on character building.
66 L. G. Hersey Hersey, of Oelwein, Iowa, gave up teaching June 1, 1928, to enter the insurance business. He is the son of S. F. Hersey, professor of physics at the College.
67 Elsie Hardy Elsie Hardy is now located at Berkeley, California, where she is studying for the M. S. degree at the Berkeley Baptist Divinity School.
68 Mr. and Mrs. Merle A. Heath The Heaths of Louisville, Kentucky, have moved to Madison, Wisconsin, where Mr. Heath will teach in the chemistry department and work on his Ph. D. Mrs. Heath is formerly Vivian Partington.
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69 Jessie L. McLaughlin Agency secretary of the American Bible Society, of Chicago, Illinois, visited Mrs. Henry Harmon and daughter, Ada Joy Harmon, Professor D. S. Wright and President Emeritus Homer H. Seerley. McLaughlin was a Methodist missionary in the Phillippines.
70 Mary L. Townsend Has resided in Denver, Colorado, for the past thirteen years and expects to make her home in California. On January 7, she left for New York; will sail for Bermuda, then go on to Jamaica, Havana, Key West, and will reach Washington in April.
71 Leo Stewart Came to the College from the Virgin Islands; now tutoring Spanish in Chicago. He is a protégé of Dr. Edward Megger, of McGregor, who brought him from the Islands to America.
72 Lenore Shanewise Former professor in the Interpretative Speech Department, and now assistant director of the Pasadena Community Playhouse, she was a member of the play cast, "Lavender Ladies", presented recently in Pasadena, California.
73 Mrs. Herbert Anderson Toops The former Laura Merrill Chassell and her family of Columbus, Ohio, went to Richmond at Thanksgiving to attend a family reunion. Herbert Toops is becoming well known for his intelligence tests for college students.
74 A. M. Swenson Swenson and his wife now reside at Mount Pleasant, Michigan; he has just received an appointment in the United States Indian Service in the Mount Pleasant Junior High School where Mrs. Swenson (formerly Helen R. Torgerson) now teaches.
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75 Pearl G. Cruise Assistant professor of education at Kansas State Teachers College, at Hays, Kansas is the author of an article appearing in the Kindergarten Service Bulletin which was issued recently by the Kansas State Teachers College.
76 Dorothea Speakman Ddirector of the College Orchestra at Western Union College, LeMars, Iowa, was manager of a recent concert. Lois Roush was piano soloist.
77 Ruth Busby Ruth is enjoying her second year of teaching in Akron, Ohio.
78 Merle M. Sliter A post-graduate pupil of Rose L. Ruegnitz, Sliter presented a piano recital in Gilchrist Chapel, June 9, 1930, assisted by Louis Heinzman, baritone pupil of W. E. Hays.
79 C. M. Hanson Head of the Psychology and Education Department at Knox College at Galesburg, Illinois plans to attend the University of Chicago pursuing graduate study towards the Ph. D. Degree. His wife is the former Marie E. Tracy.
80 Ivan Fenn A geologist associated with a prominent oil company in Texas; completed his graduate work and has been offered a position in the Science Department at the University of Texas at Austin.
81 Fred Gilchrist A lawyer and prominent business man of Laurens, Iowa, was nominated to Congress from the Tenth District to succeed L. J. Dickinson, Nominated to state senator. His father, J. C. Gilchrist, was president of the College from its founding in 1876 to 1886.
82 Roy A. Crouch Crouch as been elected Head of the Department of Education at Baylor College, Belton, Texas. He was formerly connected with Howard College at Birmingham, Alabama, and at one time a professor of education at the Florida State College for Women in Florida.
83 Mrs. William H. Scott The former Pearl Mythaler from Waterloo, Iowa, taught one year at Rockton, Illinois. She and her husband are now living on a farm near Rockton, Illinois. They have a son, Louis K. who just turned one.
84 Benjamin E. Entwisle The son of M. W. Entwisle, now working on the doctor's degree, is Head of the School of Secretarial Training at Miami Jacobs Business College of Dayton, Ohio. He was Head of the Department of Commerce in the high school at Lead, South Dakota.
85 Elizabeth E. Coder The daughter of L. G. Coder, of Muscatine, Iowa, is now teacher of music and English in the Junior High School at Newton, Iowa. She was president of Tau Sigma Delta, editor-in-chief of the College Eye, a member of the Y. W. C. A. and Cecilian Glee Club.
86 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. McConnell The former Lora Busby and husband Joseph are now in their third year of teaching at Tacoma, Washington. They spent last summer on Puget Sound.
87 Jay Busby He and his family are in Ames, Iowa, where he teaches in the junior high school. He taught for three years at Rouse, Colorado
88 George Vernon Orr Regional Manager of an automobile company in Chicago, Illinois; now Assistant Sales Manager with duties at both Toledo, Ohio, and Chicago. He spoke before the Waterloo Rotary Club on "The Development of the Automobile Business in the United States."
89 Belle Smith and Stella E. Smith Both of Des Moines, Iowa, were elected alternate delegates by the Abigail chapter of the D. A. R. at its February meeting. They will attend the Continental Congress in April in Washington, D. C.
90 Mrs. James E. Fitzgerald The former Mary J. Wilson, of Sioux City, Iowa, was nominated by the Martha Washington chapter D. A. R. of Sioux City to be a candidate for the Iowa Regent of the organization at the state meeting.
91 Paul B. Samson Professor of physical education at the Michigan State Normal College, Ypsilanti, Michigan, and wife, (Rena Mae Curkeet) announce the seventh season of North Woods Camp at Douglas Lake, Cheyboygan County, Michigan, under their management as directors.
92 Henry Iblings Now giving public recitals as a soloist of considerable promise. He entertained the Cedar Falls Rotary Club with a half-hour program at a luncheon Wednesday, January 15.
93 E. Linnie Moore Now Mrs. Carl B. Miller of Des Moines, Iowa, has gained recognition as a writer of children's songs through the publication of a new series of elementary school music books, known as the "Music Hour." Her husband is a prominent dentist in the city.
94 Mrs. Edward H. Williams The former Grace Merrick of Blencoe, Iowa, write about the work of teachers from her alma mater. Josephine V. Phillips, J. C. '26, has been a teacher for several years and has done excellent work.
95 Mrs. Lou Shearer-Jackson Shearer-Jackson is president of the Grand Chapter, P. E. O. of Florida. In 1918 Mrs. Jackson was elected mayor of Birchwood, Wisconsin. She taught in the schools of Marshall County, Iowa, for several years and was active in D. A. R.
96 Chris Trepp Is now employed with the United Fruit Company in Banes, Cuba. The town of Banes is on a bay in the province of Orient about five hundred miles from Havana, and one hundred miles from Santiago.
97 Edwin M. Wilcox Wilcox, of Independence, Iowa, who has been farming for several years in Buchanan County, has been appointed county treasurer for the year of 1930. Mr. Wilcox was a Spanish-American War veteran.
98 Mrs. R. W. Washburn The former Mildred Loucks writes that her husband, R. W. Washburn, received his master's degree at the University of Iowa last July, and is now teaching commerce in the Huron High School.
99 Joanna Elizabeth Teerink Has earned the M. A. degree from Columbia University. She also received a diploma as Director of Student Practice. She is assistant director of Teacher Training at the Teachers College at Superior, Wisconsin; was a member of Kappa Delta Pi.
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100 Genevieve Mosher The numbers "Chinese Dance" and "Waltz of the Flowers" from the Tschaikowsky Nutcracker Suite, arranged by Mr. Dubbert, were played by Genevieve of Rockford Iowa, first piano, and Rose L. Ruegnitz, second piano.
101 Lillian P. Dresser Presented a piano recital in the College auditorium and was assisted by Cecelia Dostal Weinberg.
102 Mrs. Benjamin Boardman The former Faith I. Stuntz, attended the National D. A. R. convention at Washington, D. C., in May, as an official delegate from the Cedar Falls Chapter.
103 B. B. Rice In January of 1901, Rice won the correspondence chess championship of Nebraska. The championship carried with it the degree of M. C. (Master of Chess) and high praise from chess experts in Boston and New York.
104 E. B. Lynch Professor S. A. Lynch, Head of the English Department, accompanied by his wife, and E. B. Lynch, superintendent of schools at Sigourney, Iowa motored to the Black Hills and other points in the West as part of their summer vacation.
105 Virginia Gable and Doris Young A program of original composition by two alumni was presented in Gilchrist Hall. They were among a group of students whose Christmas Carols were sung as a major feature of the program.
106 Dana Campbell, Karl Dubbert, Lorraine Jakway Campbell and Dubbert were two alumni whose original compositions were presented in a program of original compositions in Gilchrist Hall. Lorraine Jakway sang numbers written by Campbell and Ivan Streed.
107 Jennie Clute Principal of the Steuben School at Kankakee, Illinois, is given praise by an Illinois paper for what is described as an unusually interesting Patrons' Day staged recently at her school.
108 Helen C. Dickinson Dickinson, niece of Jennie Clute, is majoring in Chemistry and mathematics at Illinois Women's College. Her mother is Helen Clute Dickinson.
109 Alexander C. Roberts President of State Teachers College, San Francisco, California, with his sons Cass and Bruce motored to Wisconsin and Iowa.
110 Bertha C. Stiles Kindergarten and primary supervisor in East Waterloo, Iowa, was elected regent of the Black Hawk Chapter of the D. A. R.
111 George V. Orr Regional Manager of the Willys-Overland Automobile Company, at Chicago and Toledo, has been promoted to the vice-presidency of the Company, and has been transferred to Los Angeles, California.
112 Mrs. Louis Begeman The former Mary A. Whitworth of Cedar Falls, was elected in May to the position of president of the Iowa Grand Chapter of the P. E. O. Sisterhood at the annual meeting held in Keokuk, Iowa.
113 Myrtle Kleist She appeared on a ensemble concert program recently given in Gilchrist Chapel. She is a pupil of Alta Freeman.
114 Edith Berry Edith Berry is now employed on the Extension faculty of the Ohio State University.
115 Milo Bixler Has accepted a position in Dayton, Ohio, with the Frigidaire Corporation of the General Motors Company. He will act as assistant research chemist and test man in the chemistry laboratories of the corporation.
116 Helen Lovene Taft Taft, of Fairmont, Minnesota, is now assistant supervisor in an orphanage for native children at Haines, Alaska. She is working on a three year contract under the Presbyterian Church Board of National Missions.
117 Mrs. William M. Casey The former Margaret Kelly of Cedar Falls, has been elected the president of the Chapter R. P. E. O. Sisterhood for the coming year. This is one of the early chapters of the distinguished women's organization.
118 G. O. Hendrickson Former instructor in the Natural Science Department of the College; recently sent a box of thirty Iowa insects to the College Museum. He is now teaching in the Department of Entomology and Zoology at the State College, at Ames.
119 Dr. J. Leonard St. John State chemist, and head of the division of chemistry of the Agricultural Experiment Station at the State College of Washington, Pullman, Washington; has published reports on his studies and his work as a scientist and experimental chemist.
120 James Seerley Clark Son of Judge Atherton B. Clark and Helen Seerley Clark has been accepted as a cadet in the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, beginning his training as an officer in the U. S. Navy in September, 1930.
121 Mrs. Henry B. Allen The former Hallie Jennings, from Cozad, Nebraska, is now living in Platte Valley, Nebraska. Her husband produces and markets honey. Her family consists of a Joseph, Mary Carolyn, and a baby, Eleanor Martha.
122 F. O. Smith Head of the Psychology Department at the State University of Montana; visited in January; plans to attend Cambridge University in England for four months starting in February. He will continue his studies in psychology.
123 Charles A. Henry Now director of training at the State Normal School at Dillon, Montana; was in Cedar Falls in February and stopped to visit the old campus and faculty of his time.
124 Emma Sherrett Teacher of mathematics at the Lincoln High School, Marion, Alabama; making arrangements for some of the graduates of that high school to come to Cedar Falls to prepare for teaching work. These students will later return to teach in the colored schools.
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125 Margaret Connelly Daughter of W. J. Connelly, of Waterloo, Iowa, married in June to Robert E. Vance, of Newton, Iowa, son of Earl Vance, of Princeton, Illinois. She is an instructor of public school music at Newton. He is associated with the Jasper County Bank, at Newton
126 Zillah M. Royer Royer of Coon Rapids, Iowa, married to Everett F. Ford, on June 5. He is a student of the Teachers College.
127 Dora Bentley Daughter of Flora Bentley, of Cedar Falls, married Claude Laird, of Cleveland, Ohio, son of F. G. Laird, of Tama, Iowa. She has completed her third year as instructor at Tama Junior High School. He is now manager of an A. & P. store in Cleveland, Ohio.
128 Mary H. Mitchell Daughter of Stephen A. Mitchell, of New York, married May 14, to Lloyd S. Miller, in New York City. They will reside in Bound Brook, New Jersey.
129 Marie P. Hocke Daughter of John Hocke, of Cedar Falls, married June 1, to Otto H. Hirsch, son of Chris Hirsch, of Waverly. She taught school in Cedar Falls Township School the past two years. The will reside on a farm near Waverly.
130 Evelyn Hurlbut Daughter of E. L. Hurlbut, of Cedar Falls, married June 1, to Ray Donels, son of A. G. Donels, of Shellsburg, Iowa. She has been a music instructor at Linden, Iowa for two years. He has been teaching in the high school at Ames for the past two years.
131 Selma Huehn Huehn of Cheney, Washington, is attending Normal School at Cheney, Washington, this summer.
132 Ethel Derrickson Derrickson of Mason City, married June 9, to Buford Hiles, of Estherville, Iowa. She has been teaching in Mason City for the past four years. He is now employed in Austin, Minnesota where they will make their home.
133 Beatrice Swallum Swallum of Orlando, Florida, married June 25, to Orville C. McBride of Orlando. She has been employed as senior clerk at the U. S. Entomological laboratory at Orlando. He is associate entomologist at the laboratory.
134 Esther Schmidt Daughter of Carl Schmidt, married June 12, to Dr. Arlyss Raecker, son of Emma Raecker of Waterloo. He is a practicing dentist in Waterloo, Iowa.
135 Genevieve Mosher Mosher of Rockford, Iowa, presented a piano recital in Gilchrist Chapel, March 3. She is a pupil of Rose L. Reugnitz.
136 Denva Meyers Of Colorado Springs, Colorado, presented a piano recital in Gilchrist Chapel, assisted by Verna Thompson of Inwood, Iowa, contralto.
137 Lyla Day Teacher of piano in the Waterloo schools; met with success in her work when her pupil, Virginia Burton, won the high school contest in Waterloo and also placed first in the piano District High School contest at Oelwein.
138 Lucille Cortright Teaches music at Linn Grove; trained students who won first place in both piano and voice divisions of the District High School contests. Lyla Day and Lucille Cortright were both pupils of Alta Freeman.
139 Harryette Creasy Attending Columbia University this year and will receive her M. A. degree in English in June. She has accepted a position in Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York, in the English Department.
140 H. A. Mueller Serves as banker and a farmer, president of the Madison County Historical Society, superintendent of the Methodist Sunday School; now running for mayor. He has a daughter named Catherine.
141 L. M. Jepson Writing from New York City; managing investment securities under the firm name, Jepson, Tremaine & Co., Inc.; head office is at 25 Broadway with branch offices at York and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and Lockport, New York.
142 Cap E. Miller Professor of Agricultural Economics at the North Dakota Agricultural College, Fargo, North Dakota; as secretary of Northwest Farm Managers Association, brought the February meeting of the association to a successful end.
143 Mrs. James E. Fitzgerald The former Mary J. Wilson of Sioux City, Iowa, was elected state regent of Daughters of the American Revolution at the meeting held at Des Moines, Iowa on March 7. Her husband, James Fitzgerald, is principal of the Hopkins School in Sioux City, Iowa.
144 Ray S. Dix District Manager of the Union Life Insurance Company, with headquarters at Cedar Falls; made a remarkable record recently, securing 104 applications for life insurance in 100 days.
145 Frank M. Phillips Chief of the Division of Statistics of the United States Department of the Interior; has a report of the "Cost of School and College Text Books' printed in Midland Schools, Iowa State Teachers Association magazine.
146 Mrs. Annie Lees Huget Author of a "Founders Day Ceremony", a plan for candle lighting program for the P. E. O., which has been given publicity in the P. E. O. Record for March 1930.
147 Howard Cundy Working as a cable tester for the American Telephone and Telegraph Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
148 George V. Orr Promoted to the position of Assistant General Sales Manager by the Willys-Overland Automobile Company; began work in 1914 when he was a dealer in the company's products at Des Moines.
149 Harry Basill Fields Son of Harry E. Fields; employed as a geologist and Standard Oil engineer in Venezuela. He speaks, writes, and conducts business in Spanish.
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150 Matilda Frances Hesse Daughter of William Hesse, Cedar Falls, married Carl J. Hess, of Carroll, February 22. She has been teaching in western Iowa for the past five years. The couple will reside in Carroll, where he is a cashier in the Carroll County State Bank.