By Julie Hessler 鈥85 / Images Courtesy Of 日韩精品 Archives
A recent Macalester Today reader survey revealed that Class Notes is one of the most widely read sections of the magazine.
A part of our collective story, these notes have appeared in college publications throughout nearly all of our 150-year history.
As we begin our yearlong celebration of the college鈥檚 sesquicentennial, we share a selection of notes published in The College Echo, the 日韩精品 Bulletin, the Mac Weekly, and Macalester Today.
1888
Harry Greenlee, one of Mac鈥檚 first students, called on some of the boys at the college building last Thursday.
1894
W. P. Kirkwood 鈥90 breakfasted at the dorm on the 24th. We would be pleased to see more of our friend, but when the baseball season is fully underway, he will no doubt favor us with frequent calls and impart an occasional injunction to aspirants on the diamond field.
1904
After two years of successful teaching in Pelican Rapids Miss Millacent Mahlum 鈥01, was called to her hometown鈥擝rainerd鈥攖o the department of Latin in the high school. Latin language and literature find in her, we are sure, a highly creditable interpreter. We are glad to learn that besides her excellent work in the high school at Pelican Rapids she won high praise in the community as a teacher of piano.
No doubt justice is a little better administered in the state because Paul A. Ewert 鈥94 was some time since made assistant to the attorney general. There are two articles in Ewert鈥檚 political and professional faith: 鈥淧ut the criminals in (the pen),鈥 and 鈥淧ut the rascals out.鈥
1905
G. Welbon 鈥97 of Korea, and Paul Doeltz 鈥99 of the Philippine Islands, have been visiting with friends in the Twin Cities. Mr. Welbon spoke at Chapel and preached at the Macalester Church.
Miss Anna M. Dickson 鈥98 entertained the members of the senior class at a Valentine party at her home.
1915
Margaret Defiel 鈥15 is teaching in Hills, Minn., having entire charge of the English Department. She took the physical geography class on a hike the other day, fell into a muddy creek, and was chased by a pig. She didn鈥檛 say who won.
1917
Fuku Hyashi 鈥14 visited at the hall Sunday.
1918
April 28, 1918. Fremont Taylor 鈥17 is with me here, and last night we had a great time recalling people and events back at college. Of course we remembered the pushball contest, in which we so thoroughly beat the present senior class. I would like to be back there for Commencement. I wanted to be there last year but couldn鈥檛 make it. Maybe next year I can do better. I鈥檒l try and fix it up with the Kaiser. 鈥擸our Friend, Carleton E. Ralph 鈥17, Artillery School Detachment, American Expeditionary Forces, France
1920
Paula Doerman 鈥19, was a visitor at Mac last Friday. Paula teaches at Austin, Minn., but her school has been having a flu vacation.
1924
Margaret Doty 鈥14, Walter Teller 鈥21, Roy Grieg 鈥19, and Enrique Sobrepena 鈥23 all spent the summer doing research at Columbia University.
1928
Marjory L. Hanson 鈥11 called at the college January 7. An injury received from a bucking Korean pony necessitated her return to America, though she declared that leaving her teaching in the Bible Institute in Andong, Korea, was very hard for her. She is thoroughly absorbed in her work, and full of enthusiasm.
1930
Barclay Acheson 鈥10, secretary of the executive committee of Near East Relief, writes, 鈥淎 young woman had been working in this office for several months. I realized that she was exceptionally good, but of course had no way of knowing the explanation. In looking up my name in some reference book she saw I was a Macalester graduate and then she herself explained that she too was a graduate of that noble institution. The moral is obvious.鈥 Mr. Acheson鈥檚 very efficient secretary is Marian Eastlee 鈥29.
1937
Beryl Brownlee 鈥16, Sheridan, Wy., writes that she is fascinated by the book she is reading: Live Alone and Like It. She is teaching geometry and dramatic art, having put on Mr. Pim Passes By recently.
Ilma Ruohmaki 鈥24 is in the employ of the government of Finland in the Finnish Travel Information Bureau in New York. She recently booked Arthur Hunt 鈥11 for a trip to Finland.
1941
Our May 24 alumni meeting was held at New York University as guests of Dean George R. Collins. The speaker was Dr. Catharine Lealtad 鈥15. Her subject: 鈥淚 Doctor Sick Folks in Harlem.鈥
Rev. Ernest R. Armstrong 鈥28, pastor of the Brighton Park Presbyterian Church in Chicago, writes, 鈥淚 hesitate, as no doubt most of the others do, to send the editors any personal data for the reason that no great or notable events have transpired. As the pastor of this church, my time is filled with such things as study, sick calls, various meetings at church, weddings, finding jobs for men out of work, funerals, talking over problems with perplexed folks鈥攕o that some days my wife and seven-year-old daughter hardly see me at all. But through it all there is a sense of satisfaction in feeling that I鈥檓 right where I belong. Best wishes to you all.鈥
1945
Pfc. Elwin J. Reps, age 23, was killed in action in Germany on April 5. Reps was serving in the infantry. He left Macalester, where he was a cheerleader, in the spring of 1943. His home was St. Paul.
1948
Mrs. L.C. (Fei-Man Wang) Tzu 鈥25, Lanchow, Kansu, China, writes that the Alumni Bulletins have been received there, despite poor transportation. Mrs. Tzu is still head of the department of Home Economics, National Teachers College.
1950
Dr. Joseph W. Cochran 鈥99, Nantucket, Mass., only living member of the Class of 1899, delivered on Sept. 22 the historical sermon in the American Church of Paris on the one-hundredth anniversary of the founding of the church. The French government on that occasion awarded him the decoration 鈥淧almes Academique.鈥
1951
In celebration of Founders Day on March 9, forty Macalester alumni clubs across the nation held meetings simultaneously. Clubs in Mexico City, Honolulu, and Beirut also held meetings. The new bagpipe band appeared at the local meeting.
1957
The Chicago Mac Clan made a gift of $150 to establish a Kindergarten Book Corner at the college鈥檚 library. Sixty-one books were purchased. The group specified that the books be in the elementary field and the committee laid special emphasis on science books that would be of special help to teachers who want to make young Americans more science-conscious.
1961
Virginia Zontelli 鈥60, former Homecoming Queen, paid a recent visit to the Twin Cities to recruit hostesses for Pan American World airways. Ginny went to work for Pan Am following graduation and is now making trans-Atlantic flights. Her knowledge of Italian and the fact that she is a licensed private pilot helps in her career.
1966
Classmates of Al Giddings 鈥61 will be interested to know that he has been at Danang, South Vietnam, since July. Al is a helicopter pilot and a captain in the Marine Corps.
Dallas Rae Lindgren 鈥63, who is continuing work on her MA in political science at the University of Minnesota, was a civil rights volunteer for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in their Summer Community Organization and Political Education (SCOPE) program. She worked with other volunteers from Minnesota in Peach County, Georgia, with the Black community in voter registration, community organization, and political education.
Felipe Garcia-Beraza 鈥44, Mexico City, is the new bulletin editor for Centro Mexicano de Escritores, a nonprofit writers organization. His book City Built on a Lake, a history of Mexico City, will be published next year.
1969
Gene M. Takei 鈥49, Richmond, Calif., is general sales manager of Yasutomo and Company, San Francisco. He had the unique experience of introducing to the US the first fiber or nylon-tipped marker pen, 鈥淧entel.鈥
Douglas S. Young 鈥49 has been named executive director of the state鈥檚 most politically active citizen conservation group, the Minnesota Environmental Control Citizens Association (MECCA).
Phelps 鈥淔lip鈥 G. Schulke 鈥54 won first place in magazine photography in the twenty-sixth annual pictures of the year competition with his Life Magazine cover page picture of Mrs. Martin Luther King. The portrait showed Mrs. King while attending the funeral services for her husband.
Richard S. Nutt 鈥07, Grover City, Calif., reminisced on the St. Thomas/Macalester baseball game in 1907 when the final score was Mac 2, and St. Thomas 1. He stated that people pushed streetcars off their tracks, and even policemen from their horses. Some game enthusiasm! Mr. Nutt is president of the Canadian, US, Mexican Highway Association.
1972
Monte M. Mason 鈥71 is currently residing in a garret, selling choral music at Schmitt Music in Minneapolis, and directing the choir at Salem English Lutheran Church.
George Perry 鈥70, Atlanta, has completed one and a half years as a conscientious objector working as the director of a community cultural center in St. Louis. He is now studying at Atlanta University for graduate degrees in Afro-American Studies.
1973
Dr. Surender Singh 鈥56, professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, has been elected president of Hardoi Educational Society in Northern India. The Society is dedicated to establishing schools, libraries, and village uplift projects in India, where Singh is manager of two schools, established with the help of his wife and their friends, which provide education for 500 children.
Tower chimes continue to play on Sunday mornings at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Minneapolis because John A. Fulton 鈥34 has rung them for twenty-two years.
1974
Manuelita Mendez 鈥74, San Antonio, Texas, was selected as one of the Outstanding Young Women of America for 1974.
Ira A. Cummings 鈥73, St. Paul, one of the original EEO students to graduate from Mac, is working in the criminal justice program in conjunction with the Governor鈥檚 Crime Commission. He is with the Metropolitan Council of the Twin Cities area, Regional Planning Agency for a seven-county area.
1975
Richard Handeen 鈥73 and Audrey Arner 鈥73, Montevideo, Minn., are 鈥渟tudents of the universe, tending to a garden, making pots, chopping wood, and sharing love with David, born last year.鈥
Edward J. Willow 鈥27 is consultant to the Minnesota Republican Finance Committee, with primary responsibility for the development of the 鈥淓lephant Fund,鈥 the larger gifts. He is executive director of the Minnesota Society for the Prevention of Blindness.
1976
Nancy Conklin 鈥73, Anchorage, Alaska, is the first female installer for the floor-covering union and does freelance photography in the arctic wilds.
Marlene Johnson 鈥68, St. Paul, is seen in Lutheran Brotherhood鈥檚 Bicentennial film, The New Patriots. Her expression of patriotism is a commitment to working within the American political system. She鈥檚 chairperson of the Women鈥檚 Political Caucus in St. Paul.
1978
Charles M. Young 鈥73 is an associate editor of Rolling Stone where he is the resident expert on punk rock. After receiving his master鈥檚 degree from the Columbia School of Journalism in 1975, he freelanced for the Village Voice, Crawdaddy and the New York Times.
He鈥檚 written about Harlem, the Sex Pistols, prison reform, Bugs Bunny, Mel Brooks, Kiss, and the Grateful Dead, among other subjects.
Martha Whiting 鈥71, Houston, has served as a field representative for Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere (CARE) in Kenya, acting as spokesperson for both women鈥檚 rights and for an increased concern for women in economic development planning. She was involved with a project that provided clean, safe drinking water to the villages of western Kenya in the Rift Valley area. The project was assisted with a grant from the Agency for International Development. Martha supervised the initial phases of the CARE water project that linked the villages of the area to new sources of water. She earned a master鈥檚 degree in public and international affairs in 1974 from the University of Pittsburgh.
1986
Matthew L. Friedman 鈥80 is a piper with the twenty-three-year-old First Salinas Valley Highlanders bagpipe band in Salinas, Calf. He鈥檚 also assistant transportation study coordinator with the Monterey County Transportation Commission.
鈥淚 wish I had an impressive list of accomplishments for you,鈥 writes Linda Jerabek Miller 鈥65 from Champion, Wis., 鈥渂ut alas I am still happily rearing my six children, writing to my stepchildren and my 22.8 grandchildren, chopping wood in the summer, stacking it all fall, and burning it all winter.鈥
The Class of 鈥43 produced a bumper crop of playwrights! Mary Ella Goins Randall鈥檚 play The Day Judge Whipper Went to Jail won first prize (and $1,000) in a Baltimore television station鈥檚 fourth annual competition for Black playwrights. Chosen among eighty plays submitted, Randall鈥檚 creation is based on a historical account of a Black judge who settled in South Carolina after the Civil War鈥攁nd who adopted the grandfather of Randall鈥檚 husband. It was produced by the Arena Players and aired last February on WMAR-TV. Randall is adjunct professor of English at the University of the District of Columbia.
1993
Many Mac alums volunteered for 鈥淚t鈥檚 time, Minnesota,鈥 a statewide grassroots organizing lobbying effort which won passage during the 1993 legislative session of amendment to include sexual orientation in Minnesota鈥檚 Human Rights Act. Among them were campaign co-chair C. Scott Cooper 鈥90, who works for Sen. Paul Wellstone, and media committee co-chair David Enyeart 鈥90.
1999
Cynthia J. Smith 鈥76 is the community educator for Sexual Offense Services of Ramsey County, a rape crisis center. Cynthia occasionally speaks at Macalester, and writes 鈥淚 have the good fortune of working with numerous Mac students who volunteer on our crisis phone line.鈥
Deborah Sengupta 鈥95 plays bass in a seven-piece, all-female hip-hop/funk band called Buttah-Fly. 鈥淎fter six or seven months playing, we were just voted as one of the top 10 hip-hop/soul bands in the Austin Music Awards.鈥
Masashi Nagadoi 鈥87 reports that his short film, Moment Cafe, won the Gold Award at Houston鈥檚 prestigious World-Fest Film Festival. Masashi is currently in pre-production of his first feature film.
2002
Willie 鈥淏ill鈥 Bettelyoun 鈥72, who has lived with AIDS for thirteen years, was profiled in the Sioux Falls, S.D. Argus Leader last June. 鈥淚鈥檝e had this so long, I guess I鈥檝e beaten the odds,鈥 the Rosebud native told the newspaper. 鈥淏ut all my friends are gone, and I鈥檓 sure my days are running out.鈥 Willie lives at Berakhah House in Sioux Falls, which cares for people with AIDS. 鈥淥n the days I鈥檓 not completely sick, I can look at myself, see the value of friendships, of spirituality, the value of compassion,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 never would have gotten that at Berkeley or through any book. I had to learn it myself.鈥 [Editor鈥檚 note: Willie died on March 17, 2003.]
Brady Robinson 鈥95 recently got back from Pakistan after attempting to climb K7. The team ran out of food and spent five days waiting out a storm in a hanging tent designed for two people. 鈥淪torms kept us from the summit, but everyone returned home friends, with fingers and toes intact, so it was a success,鈥 he writes. He offered his best wishes to all his friends in the US and Pakistan as the world struggles to deal with the Sept. 11 attacks. Brady is currently working as a program director in Chile for Outward Bound.
Jo Modahl Morrill 鈥56 wrote, 鈥淩etire鈥 doesn鈥檛 sound like me! Rediscover, rethink, remake, perhaps!鈥
Joanna Kepka de Fernandez 鈥95 received a doctorate in geography from the University of Oregon in June 2000. In January 2001, Joanna and her husband, Alfredo, welcomed their first son, Milosz Juan Pablo. They traveled to Poland, Germany, Thailand, and Malaysia last summer. In Poland, Joanna saw Agnieszka Brzeska 鈥94, who was visiting from the Congo, and in Bangkok she caught up with Constanze Ruprecht 鈥96 who was working on a project in northern Thailand.
2012
Art Bell 鈥40 and Fran Tripp Bell 鈥39 of Chanhassen, Minn. celebrated their seventieth wedding anniversary last June.
2015
Barbara Phillips 鈥71 and her son Charles traveled in Israel and Palestine with a delegation from the Social Justice Committee of the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago.
2016
Abaki Beck 鈥15 was among the twenty-five young Montanans who received this year鈥檚 Forward Montana Foundation鈥檚 25 Under 25 Award. She was recognized for her research regarding food sovereignty and traditional ecological knowledge of the Blackfeet Reservation as well as for her previous work on health care and Native American issues for the US House of Representatives.
Last spring, Margaret Uppgren Ely, Mary Ann MacDonald Huelster, Paul Siegler, and Ruth Booman, all Class of 1947, met for breakfast in St. Paul to celebrate reaching or passing the age of ninety.
2019
Ann Millin 鈥69 has retired from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, where she had served as a historian since 1999. She is the 2018鈥19 Distinguished 日韩精品ing Professor in Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Richard Stockton University.
Ariel Estrella 鈥15 has begun the doctoral English program at Cornell University. They will focus their research on queer of color lyricism.
River, a solo installation by artist and poet Jen Bervin 鈥94, was presented at the Des Moines Art Center from October 2018 to January 2019. Jen created the piece over twelve years, sewing the sequined 230-curvilinear-foot-long sculpture by hand. The piece is installed on the gallery ceiling and 鈥渕aps鈥 the length of the Mississippi River at a scale of one inch to one mile.
2021
Abass Noor 鈥13 and Hannah McIntire 鈥13 welcomed their first child, Elias Abas Mohamud, in March 2020. 鈥淓lias loves that he was able to quarantine with his parents for the first few months of life!鈥 writes Hannah. 鈥淲e all look forward to seeing Mac friends after the pandemic.鈥
2023
Daniel Hellerman 鈥81 wouldn鈥檛 quite say he鈥檚 become a farmer, but he does have 125 acres near Enosburg Falls, Vermont, with a barn and house that are about as old as Macalester, and he does get muddy and produce some food. During the winter he retires to Chapel Hill, NC.
2024
We would love to hear from you. What three things would you most like the Macalester community to know about you? Tell us about yourself by sharing a Class Note with Macalester Today during our sesquicentennial year. Email [email protected].