The purpose of the Young Women's Christian Association was to develop Christian character especially through study of the Bible. Additionally, the association conducted active Christian work to extend the Kingdom of God throughout the world. The first record of the YWCA at St. Cloud State was in 1887 and believed the club existed until sometime in the mid-1950s.
Retired SCSU faculty member
The bi-monthly publication, in which its first issue appeared on June 27, 1980, included historic reviews of the communities in the Wright County area. It also served as a vehicle for advertisers who wanted a large yet concentrated coverage for his/her business or company in the Wright County area.
On June 23, 1981, the name changed to Wright-Way...Sher-Way Shopper to include Sherburne County.
Women's Recreation Association was a student organization that was established in March 1929 and was active to around the 1977/1978 academic school year. First established as a chapter of the national Women's Athletic Association to promote women's participation and development in athletics and physical education, the W.A.A. would retain this national affilition through December 1961. The organization adopted the name Women's Recreation Association (W.R.A.) because they believed it would make the organization more inclusive to all female students on campus, as well as be more reflective of all the activities and sports that the group hosted and coordinated on campus.
The W.R.A. also marks the begining of women's intercollegiate sports on campus. The group hosted tournaments for women's volleyball and basketball, as well as organizing leagues for softball, gynamstics, and track and field events alongside the various other extracurricular activities the organization hosted.
The W.R.A. appears in the student handbook for the last time in the 1977/1978 academic school year. It is unclear why they disbanded.
The Women’s Center was established in late fall of 1989.
Directors:
Jane Olsen: 10/1989-6/2022
Rebecca Kotz :7/2022-6/2023 (interim)
Heather Brown: 7/2023-
Joseph P. Wilson was born in Columbia Falls, Maine on March 16, 1823. Wilson, along with George F. Brott and C.T. Stearns, purchased and platted the land that would become Lower Town of St. Cloud, Minnesota. Wilson studied law in Geneva, Illinois and in 1846 enlisted for the Mexican War as part of an Illinois regiment. After the war, Wilson married Mary P. Corbett and moved to St. Anthony Falls, Minnesota in 1850. Upon arriving in Minnesota, Wilson became involved in real estate, purchasing property in what is now northeast Minneapolis and in St. Anthony Park. Wilson also purchased property in what would become St. Cloud. He also worked in the lumbering, mercantile, and railroad business. He served as a Ramsey county commissioner from 1852 to 1855, was a member of the 1858 Minnesota constitutional convention, and served as a Minnesota state senator from 1864 to 1865.
Wilson was an original landowner in the new city of St. Cloud, Minnesota.
He moved to St. Cloud in 1863 and built a house in East St. Cloud in 1888. It was here that he platted more city lots and lived until his death on February 18, 1900. His wife Mary and their five children survived him - Justus A. Wilson (1851), Ida Wilson Van Cleve (1854), Franklin B. Wilson (1859), Edith Wilson Thompson (1861), and Helen Wilson Schwartz (1865). Wilson is buried in St. Cloud's North Star Cemetery.
Joseph was the brother of one of St. Cloud's founders, John L. Wilson.
St. Cloud State president from 1965 to 1971. He also served as a faculty member in Speech Communication and, after retirement from St. Cloud State, served as various interim capacities on campus.
Gene Wenstrom was born in Fergus Falls, Minnesota in 1946. He was a member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party and served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1975 to 1978 for District 11A. He campaigned unsuccessfully for the 7th Congressional district, Minnesota in 1982. He has two children, Daniel and Tamara, with his wife LeAnn.
Herman A. Wegner was born in 1877. Around 1923, he moved to St. Cloud, Minnesota from Montana. He resided in St. Cloud from that time until his death in 1947. He had worked on the Flathead Indian Reservation in Montana as a teacher. He also worked on the Blackfeet Reservation as an engineer. He owned some rental property, from which he secured an income. He also worked in Minnesota at the Veteran's Administration Hospital, and did some extra carpentry work.
Wegner married Christine M. Clausen (1889-1980) in around 1912. The couple had two children: Henry Wegner, born in 1915 or 1916, and Rose Wegner, born in 1918. Henry lived in St. Cloud all his life. Rose resided in St. Cloud until about the age of 19. She then moved to Washington D.C., where she worked in the Census Bureau, and later moved to Chicago and Minneapolis, working in federal government agencies. She was with the Department of Interior office in Minneapolis for many years. She returned to St. Cloud around 1973, and died there in 1984.
The Waverly Literary Society was organized in 1912. They received their name from Sir Walter Scott's "Waverly Novels" and originally began studying these novels. The society also studied poems, mythology, short stories, and opera. Over the years, the society evolved into providing social activities for women. The last mention is from the January 31, 1947 issue of the Chronicle that notes the Waverly Literary Society had disbanded.
Claudia Meier Volk was a Minnesota House Representative of District 18A for the years 1975-1976. She was a member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL). She lived in Rice, Minnesota until she married, thus the change in name from Claudia Meier to Claudia Meier Volk. She moved to Ray, North Dakota with her husband Martin Volk. She resigned from her political office sometime in 1976.
While serving as a legislator, she served on the Agriculture, Health and Welfare, and Judiciary Committees. She showed interest in issues concerning school aid, family planning, and equal rights.
She was born in North Dakota in 1948 and later moved to Minnesota. She graduated from Osseo High School, attended the College of St. Scholastica, and graduated from the University of Minnesota with a B.S. in Nursing. She then became a registered nurse and became politically involved. Some of the positions she held include: Benton Co. Chairperson, Vice-President Little Rock Lake Improvement Association, member of Rice Sportsman's Club, and a member of the Minnesota Nurses Association.
St. Cloud State faculty member
Francis H. Voelker was born in Thorp, Wisconsin on January 5, 1931 to Gilbert A. and Josephine Voelker.
After earning a bachelor of arts degree from St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, Fran served in the US Army. Upon discharge from the Army in 1955, Fran taught English and coached at Foley High School in Foley, Minnesota. In 1959, Fran left Foley High School and began his collegiate teaching career at St. Cloud State College (later University) in St. Cloud, Minnesota.
Fran taught English and Mass Communications at St. Cloud State until his retirement in 1991. He also served as the first president of the Inter-Faculty Organization (IFO) after collective bargaining was instituted in the state of Minnesota.
With wife Ludmila (Mil), Fran co-authored and edited three editions of the book Mass Media: Forces in Our Society, History and Legends of the Padrnos Family, and History of Big Birch Lake.
While a faculty member at St. Cloud State, Fran earned a master of science degree in 1959.
Fran married Mil Padrnos on December 27, 1954 at St. Hedwig's Catholic Church in Holdingford, Minnesota. They had five children: Mary Jo, Marjorie, Catherine, Thomas, and Paul.
Beginning in 1962, the St. Cloud State Departments of English and Art published a magazine that showcased the literary and artistic talents of students on campus. The first magazine was titled Parallels. In the first volume of Parallels, it stated that Parallels “was chosen as the name of this magazine because of the parallel nature of the arts. The word itself means that two or more things have the same course, or exhibit an analogy. The fine arts endeavor to give aesthetic pleasure; they follow different but parallel routes to this end.”
In the fall of 1970 Parallels was renamed Sticks & Stones. According to the St. Cloud State College Student Activities Budget Request Information and Evaluation Form (1970), the purpose of Sticks and Stones was “to provide an outlet for the publication of outstanding literary and artistic material as well as essays pertaining to the arts and sciences.”
Sticks and Stones was reborn as Wheatsprout in 1976. Crosscurrents was the new name in 1985, and in 1991 the artistic and literary magazine was published under the name Upper Mississippi Harvest. Why were there so many name changes? The Spring 1991 edition of the Upper Mississippi Harvest tells the reader that, “[e]very decade, nearly to the minute, this magazine has changed names: Parallels, Sticks and Stones, Wheatsprout, Crosscurrents, and now the Harvest. Change seems to be the only tradition this university can carry on. Besides, St. John’s has a magazine called Crosscurrents which publishes new Catholic hymns.”
Listed are year, editor, then faculty advisor:
1962, Vol. 1, No. 1; Carole Schauls and Roberta Christian; Mary Barrett and Dr. Paul Cairns
1963; Judy Reichel and Carol Schauls; Mary Barrett and Dr. Edward Lewis
1964; David McGovern and Jackie Stebner; Robert Coard and Charles Crane
1965 Karl Borgeson, Sonja Anderson, and Jymie Powers; Charles Crane and Edward Mitchell
1966; Joseph Stanton and Eileen Ondracek; Mr. Korte and Mr. Thompson
1967; Jim Berg and Judy Rice; John Rylander and Gerald Korte
Spring 1968; None listed; None listed
1969; Rick Glove and Merle Kessler; Dr. Marvin Thompson and Ted Sherarts
1969-1970; Richard Class and Dianne Hudson; Dr. Paul Cairns and Ted Sherarts
Fall 1970; Deborah Olsen; None listed
Winter 1971; Merle Kessler; Dean Armstrong, Dean Mattil, and Ruel Fischmann
Spring 1971; Merle Kessler; Dean Armstrong, Dean Mattil, and Ruel Fischmann
Spring 1973, Vol. 3, No. 1; Stephanie Borden; William Meissner and Richard Martin
Spring 1974, Vol. 4, No. 2; Chris Boros; William Meissner
Winter 1974, Vol. 4, No. 1; Chris Boros; William Meissner
Winter 1975, Vol. 5, No. 2; Tom Arnold; William Meissner
Spring 1975, Vol. 5, No. 3; Tom Arnold; William Meissner
Spring 1976; David J. Feela and Michael Hall; William Meissner
Spring 1977; Brian Longley; William Meissner
Spring 1978; Marcia Jagodzinske; William Meissner
Spring 1979 Michael Hall William Meissner
1980 Brenda Mann and Bruce Huisinga; William Meissner
Spring 1981; Jeff Kulow; William Meissner
Winter 1981/1982; Jeff Kulow; William Meissner
Spring 1982; Jeff Kulow; William Meissner
Winter 1982/1983; James J. Barrett; Sid Parham
Spring 1984; Elizabeth A. Pike; William Meissner
Spring 1985; Julie A. Jahnke and Denise Schaefer; William Meissner
1985-1986; Julie Surma and Paul Cannon; None listed
Spring 1987; Kristen Matheson; Bill Meissner and Connie Perry
1989; Lisa Meillier, Tracy Gilsvik, and Wayne Nelsen; Bill Meissner
1990; Caroline Bad Heart Bull; Bill Meissner and Steve Crow
Spring 1991; Doug Blumhardt and Caroline Bad Heart Bull; Bill Meissner
Spring 1992; Michelle Filkins and Heidi L. Everett; Bill Meissner
Spring 1993; Chris Jeub; Bill Meissner
Spring 1995; Emily D. Wicktor; Steve Klepetar
Spring 1996; Emily D. Wicktor; Steve Klepetar
Spring 1997; Heidi R. Gomez; Steve Klepetar
Spring 1998; Maggie Escalas; Steve Klepetar
Spring 1999; Jessica Gilbertson and Sara Wainscott; Bill Meissner
Spring 2000; Kelli Hallsten; Bill Meissner
Spring 2001; Anne Lewandowski; SallyJo Sorensen
Spring 2002; Jonathan Quijano; SallyJo Sorensen
Spring 2003; Patrick Markfort and Jonathan Quijano; William Meissner
Spring 2004; Jill Richter; William Meissner
Spring 2005; Stephanie Burnes and Bethany Frenette; William Meissner
Spring 2006; Allison Peipus; William Meissner
Spring 2007; Stephanie Burnes and Naomi Poppler; Bill Meissner
Spring 2008; Ben Doberstein; Bill Meissner
Spring 2009; Christy Gillen and Nichole Held; Bill Meissner
Learning Resources and Technology Services was a single entity under the leadership of a single dean until July 2011. It then split into two separate units - Learning Resources Services (LRS), which is the library, and Information Technology Services (ITS). ITS is headed by a Chief Information Officer.
The name of Learning Resources Services later changed their name to University Library.
Information Services was created in 1959. Its mission was to disseminate information of generaml interest about St. Cloud State to students, faculty, staff, parents, alumni, and the interested public. Unit duties were expanded in 1997 to include publications and other external communication, such as marketing.
1959-7/1987: Information Services (1)
7/1987-9/1997: Public Relations and Publications (2)
9/1997-2011+: University Communications (3)
Heads of this unit include:
1959-8/1986: (Howard) Ray Rowland, Director (1)
8/1986-1/1987: Sue Mackert, Director (acting) (4)
1/1987-9/1996: Angelo Gentile, Director (5)
9/1996-2/1997: Marsha Shoemaker, Director (acting) (6)
2/1997-2/2000: E. Barry Wegener, Director of Marketing and Communications (7)
2000-2001: Greg Czerwinski, Director of Marketing and Communications (8)
2001-2003: Lisa Foss, Director of Marketing and Communications (interim) (9)
2003-2004: Lisa Foss, Director of Marketing and Communications (10)
2004-2005: Lisa Foss, Assistant Vice President for Marketing and Communication (11)
7/2005-2011+: Loren Boone, Assistant Vice President for Marketing and Communication (12)
Aloys John Tschumperlin owned the largest furniture store and funeral business in St. Cloud during the early 1900s. He was born July 10, 1873 in St. Cloud to Aloys Tschumperlin and Mary Grandelmeyer. He was the oldest of eight surviving children. Other siblings included Mary, Joseph W., Martha, Raymond, Rosa, Anna, and Edward. Tschumperlin worked at his father Aloys' furniture store which opened in 1872. He purchased the business in 1904 and closed it in 1928 to focus on the funeral business. In 1930, Tschumpelin moved the funeral business to 315 West St. Germain into the Edelbrock-Zapp-Scott House. In 1949, Bernard Williams joined the business and the funeral home was renamed Tschumperlin-Williams Funeral Home and the business moved to 1900 Veterans Drive in St. Cloud in 1973.
Tshcumperlin had great interest in the Nevada gold mines and was a member of multiple organizations such as the Elks, Chamber of Commerce, and Knights of Columbus. He was chairman of the Red Cross Stearns County chapter, and won awards for his raising of tree roses and dahlias. Tschumperlin served with the Minnesota National Guard during World War I. Tschumperlin married Elizabeth McLaughlin on August 15, 1907 and they had one daughter, Margaret, who was born on November 8, 1909. Aloys and Elizabeth continued to live in St. Cloud until their deaths. Tshcumperlin passed away on November 19, 1959, while Elizabeth died on March 2, 1954. Both are buried in St. Cloud's Calvary Cemetery. Daughter Margaret, who married James W. Colliton on September 6, 1933, passed away in Salt Lake City, Utah, on August 10, 1969, leaving behind her husband and three children, James (Jr.), Patricia, and Joan.
Campus Laboratory School staff member
Tiffany was an Archives student assistant in 2008-2009.
Born on July 14, 1898 to Henry E. and Rose H. Thompson, Ruth A. Thompson attended University High School in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and graduated in 1916. In 1919 at the age of 22, Thompson entered St. Cloud State University (then known as the St. Cloud Normal School) after completing teachers training courses in Minneapolis. After her 1921 graduation from St. Cloud State, she taught at Northfield Public Schools. Thompson died on January 27, 1982 at age 83 and buried in Sunset Memorial Park Cemetery in Minneapolis.
Mark is a 1975 St. Cloud State graduate.
Romauld B. Thibault was born in 1918 in Garden, Michigan. He served in the U.S. Army during WWII. In 1945 he married Rachael V. Kramer, together they had two sons. During his life, he worked for the Great Northern Railroad and then later the Burlington Northern Railroads as a conductor and brakeman. He was an active member of the local labor lodges and the national labor unions who competed vigorously for the right to represent railroad workers in negotiations with the Railroad. He retired in 1980. While working, Thibault served as the local chairman of the O.R.C. & B (Order of Railway Conductors and Brakemen) from 1956 to 1980. He also served as the National Vice-president of the O.R.C. & B in 1958. He passed away in 2002.
St. Cloud State University began producing plays as early as 1956; however, a drama department does not appear in the directories until the 1966/67 school year, where it is listed as Speech and Dramatic Art.
The department was part of Speech Communication, splitting off as the Department of Theatre in 1969.
Below are listed the years, name of department, and chairs, all taken from the campus directory.
1969-71: Theatre, Keith Michael
1971-72: Theatre, Dale Swanson
1972-73: Theatre, Walter Eysselinck
1973-76: Theatre, Dale Swanson
1976-82: Theatre, Ronald Perrier
1982-88: Theatre, Dale Swanson
1988-91: Theatre, Dick Cermele
1991-94: Theatre, Lin Holder
1994-97: Theatre, Brad Chisholm
1997-98: Theatre and Film Studies, Brenda Wentworth
1998-99: Theatre and Film Studies, Andrew Vorder Brugge
1999-02: Theatre, Film Studies, and Dance, Andrew Vorder Brugge
2002-06: Theatre, Film Studies, and Dance, R. Bruce Hyde
2006-08: Theatre, Film Studies, and Dance, Eva Honegger
2008-11: Theatre, Film Studies, and Dance, Jeffrey Bleam
Theatre L'Homme Dieu was founded in 1961 as a joint project between the city of Alexandria, Minnesota and representatives of St. Cloud State University. Members of these two communities created the Performing Arts Foundation. The goal of the foundation was to stage open-air performances by students and directors of St. Cloud State University (along with actors and actresses from outside of the college) in Alexandria, a town in Minnesota's lake country with ample tourism in the summer. The first performance at Theatre L'Homme Dieu was "See How They Run" on June 27, 1961. Budget problems caused St. Cloud State University to terminate their support for the theatre in 1985.
The presidents of the Performing Arts Foundation were either faculty or administrators at St. Cloud State University. The position was held by:
George Budd, 1961-1965
Robert H. Wick, 1966-1971
Charles J. Graham, 1972-1981
Brendan J. McDonald, 1982-1983
Harvey Paul Jurik, 1984
Brendan J. McDonald, 1985-1986
Don Sikkink, 1987-1989
Ralph Tillitt, 1990-1993
Claudia Bursch, 1993-1998
This newspaper was created by leftist students of St. Cloud State College, St. John's University and the College of St. Benedict to provide an alternative viewpoint to other existing campus news sources.
The Department of Teacher Developement was established in 1979 which combined the departments of Elementary Education (ELED), Secondary Education (SEED), and Student Teaching (EDT). Teacher Development prepares teachers who will create humane, culturally responsive and activity-centered learning environments, These environments serves the needs of all students in preparing informed productive, engaged citizens for a changing and diverse world.
St. Cloud chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE) was founded in 1960 and is still active on campus today in 2022. The goal of this male social fraternity is "to aid college men in mental, moral, and social development." They are currently the longest standing fraternity at St. Cloud State.
The Synchonette Swim Club was established in 1957. Between the years of 1957 and 1986, the Synchronettes produced an annual swim show on campus that was open to the public. The main objective of the club was to demonstrate that physical activity and exercise could be both fun and entertaining.
The swim shows put on by the club had a variety of themes related to the zodiac, Broadway musicals, fairy tales, and comic strips. The club created the concept, storyline, choreography, and sets for each show, all based from the earnings from the show held the previous year.
The Synchronettes disbanded in 1988 due to lack of active members.
Jane Grey Cannon Swisshelm was born December 6, 1815, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, daughter of Thomas and Mary Cannon. At age 21 in 1836, Jane married James Swisshelm.
Swisshelm became involved with the abolitionist and feminist movements, founding a newspaper called Saturday Visitor in Pittsburgh in 1847. In 1857, after divorcing her husband, Swisshelm moved to St. Cloud, Minnesota and established another newspaper, St. Cloud Visiter. Located on the banks of the Mississippi River near the future site of St. Cloud State University, the newspaper became a focal point in local politics, especially local St. Cloud politician Sylvanus B. Lowery. Later, the Visiter printing press was destroyed by a mob. Soon after, Swisshelm founded another paper in St. Cloud, St. Cloud Democrat.
Despite writing articles advocating more freedom for some, Swisshelm also pushed for the complete extermination of Minnesota’s Dakota Indian population. During the Civil War, the federal government fought the Dakota in Minnesota, commonly known as the U.S.-Dakota Conflict of 1862. Defeated, the Dakota were expelled from Minnesota the next year.
In December 1862, Swisshelm moved to Washington, D.C., leaving her nephew, William B. Mitchell, to run the Democrat.
In September 1863, Swisshelm sold the Democrat to Mitchell, and then served as a nurse for the Union army for the remainder of the Civil War. Swisshelm died in Swissvale, near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1884.
In 1852, Jane and James had a daughter, Mary Henrietta, who was called Zo or Nettie.
Swisshelm's sister Elizabeth married Henry Z. Mitchell, who were the parents of William B. Mitchell.
John Davis “J.D.” Sullivan was born in 1862 in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada. He was married to Elizabeth M. Schmidt in 1886, they had four children. J.D. served as a county attorney for Stearns County until his election to Minnesota District 45 in 1911. He served for twenty years in the Minnesota state senate, until 1931. John Sullivan died in 1933. Henry Holland Sullivan, the son of John D. Sullivan, was born in 1889. He married to Hazel J. Brown in 1913, until her death in 1841. By 1940, Henry was remarried to Ruth L. Henry was elected to the Minnesota state senate in 1935 and serve until 1955. Henry Sullivan died in 1959.
Established in 1972, the unit changed its name to Student Affairs in November 2022.
The first church service of the Episcopal Church of St. Cloud was held on February 17, 1856, at the residence of John H. Taylor. On April 12, 1856 St. John's Parish had its beginnings when ten people drew up and signed the necessary articles of conformity and agreement to the Protestant Episcopal Church. On June 11, 1858, the first church building in St. Cloud was consecrated. In 1928, St. John's Episcopal Church of St. Cloud absorbed the Grace Church of Sauk Rapids. The Grace Church of Sauk Rapids existed from 1869 to 1928. October 9, 1869, marked the incorporation meeting of the parish. In 1892, the old church building was moved to the rear of the lot of the new church building was built. In 1969, lightning struck the church destroying it. The new church building was completed in 1971. For a more detailed history of the church and its activities the reader is encouraged to read the minutes volume of the ladies societies.
St. Cloud State University was established by the state of Minnesota in 1869 as the Third State Normal School.
The St. Cloud Normal Literary Society aimed to improve skills in public speaking, reading, and to gain knowledge in parliamentary rules. The earliest record of the society appeared in 1887, while the final records date to 1903. It is likely the society disbanded in 1903.
LaVyrle Kulick Spencer was born on July 17, 1943, in Browerville, Minnesota, to Jan and Louis Kulick. After her parents divorced, LaVyrle and her sister moved to Alexandria, Minnesota, with mother Jan.
Soon after graduation from the Staples High School in Staples, Minnesota, LaVyrle married her high school sweetheart Dan Spencer on February 10, 1962. They had two children: Amy Elizabeth and Beth Adair, who passed away in 1990.
Living in the Twin Cities since just after their wedding, Spencer’s first job outside the home was as an instructional aid at the Osseo junior high school in Osseo, Minnesota. During that time, she read the romance novel The Flame and the Flower by Kathleen Woodiwiss, a trend setting book that sold millions of copies. In an interview in 1979, Spencer said that Woodiwiss book “broke the barrier by allowing romantic novelists, most of whom were women, to write tastefully but explicitly about sex.” Spencer began her writing career in July 1976, basing her story on a dream she had about her grandmother’s life on a Minnesota farm. Spencer was assisted by Woodiwiss to get that tale published. Her first book, The Fulfillment, was made available in 1979.
Until her retirement in 1997 at the height of her career, Spencer published 24 books. Four were adapted into television movies: The Fulfillment of Mary Gray (based on her book The Fulfillment) (1989), Morning Glory (1993), Home Song (1996), and Family Blessings (1998). Well known Hollywood actors and actresses appeared in the adaptations including Cheryl Ladd, Christopher Reeve, Lynda Carter, and Pam Grier.
Spencer was elected to the Romance Writers of America’s Hall of Fame. Many of Spencer’s books have been New York Times bestsellers.
Spencer’s books are:
The Fulfillment (1979)
The Endearment (1982)
Forsaking All Others (1982)
Hummingbird (1983)
A Promise to Cherish (1983)
The Hellion (1984)
Sweet Memories (1984)
Twice Loved (1984)
Separate Beds (1985)
Spring Fancy (1985)
A Heart Speaks (1986)
The Gamble (1987)
Years (1987)
Vows (1988)
Morning Glory (1989)
Bitter Sweet (1990)
Forgiving (1991)
Bygones (1992)
November of the Heart (1993)
Family Blessings (1994)
Home Song (1995)
That Camden Summer (1996)
Then Came Heaven (1997)
Small Town Girl (1997)
Kenneth is an 1933 and 1934 SCSU graduate.
Born in 1928, Don Sikkink arrived at St. Cloud State in 1963 as a faculty member in Speech. He was appointed dean of the School of Arts and Sciences in 1965 and served until 1970. He returned to the classroom. Don served as the acting director of International Studies in 1983/84, acting dean, and late, the permanent dean of the College of Fine Arts and Humanities from 1984 to 1988. For the 1988/89 academic year, he was the acting vice president for Academic Affairs. Don retired in 1990.
He received his BA (1949), MA (1951), and Ph.D. (1954) from the University of Minnesota. From 1956 to 1963, Don was a faculty member at South Dakota State.
His family included wife Arlene Angel and four children - Jeffrey, Kathryn, Lynn, and Julie.
Don passed away on January 23, 2018 at the age of 89.
In March 1949, Sigma Gamma Phi sorority was established as the Aurora Society and whose purpose was to promote the cultural and social activities on the campus. In April 1951, the Aurora Society reorganized as a Greek organization, Sigma Gamma Phi. Its purpose was to promote fellowship and social experiences within the group and on campus. Ultimately, Sigma Gamma Phi wanted to be affiliated with a national sorority. In January 1966, Sigma Gamma Phi was reorganized as Delta Zeta through colonization. Delta Zeta's motto is "Enriching the Lives of Women."
Glen Sherwood was born May 7, 1934, in Tracy, Minnesota. He was married to Joann in 1955, they had two sons. He attended the University of North Dakota, where he received a Bachelor of Philosophy in History and Natural Science in 1956. He then attended Utah State University in 1959, where he received a Master of Science, and a Doctor of Philosophy in Wildlife Biology in 1966.
Glen Sherwood was an outdoor writer, realtor, lay preacher, and a Representative of District 4B. He worked for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from 1962-1970. He was a member of the Audubon Society, Wildlife Society, and Wilderness Society. He has received the American Motor Conservation Award in 1970 and the North Dakota Conservationist of the Year in 1969.
As a representative, he was a three-term DFLer from 1972-1976. In 1978, he switched to the Independent-Republican Party. Sherwood served as a representative from 1973-1982. He has served on various committees: Criminal Justice, Juvenile Justice, Education, Environment and Natural Resources, Agriculture, Government Operations, and Transportation. Later, he ran unsuccessfully for the Independent Republican Party endorsement for the gubernatorial nomination in 1982.