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(Later Weitzenhoffer) was a crazy rich art collector. She married an oil baron, and amassed over $50 million dollars worth of art that she donated to the University of Oklahoma Fred Jones Art Institute upon her death. Crazy stuff.

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(Later Ettlinger) supposedly graduated from Stanford after she went to 麻豆破解版 State. Not certain about the source on this, but supposedly she performed in the USO during WWII, eventually married one Don Ettlinger, another writer, and the two of them worked together on television writing.

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

(Stephenson) worked for the USO for a good while, and her name is in the Plaza of Heroines. Aside from that, largely unremarkable for our purposes. Student: Willa S. McLean was a Larned native, from out west. She founded Alpha Kappa Alpha, the African American sorority, here at WSU, which is still active.

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

was a Larned native, from out west. She founded Alpha Kappa Alpha, the African American sorority, here at WSU, which is still active.

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

became a writer, both short fiction, novels, and television. Nothing I鈥檇 heard of, I鈥檓 afraid, but she still seemed to find some success. Wrote the Green Kingdom, A Walk in the Spring Rain, some other stuff.

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

Returns as a major player in the English Department, in 1949. We used to host an Annual Meeting of the Kansas College Teachers of English (what a mouthful), records from 1935 corroborate this. Seems to have been a nice affair, with live music. Records indicating the start of the creative writing program around 1939.

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

Was a hard working professor of English, and published a book called Brazos. Seemed like a good sort. He was drafted in 1943, and hasn鈥檛 shown up in records since. I hope he didn鈥檛 die. It certainly seems like the English Department was in good graces with the Presidents during this time, so props to that.

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Apparently did a great job working on English for aviation students in 1944. It certainly still seems topical considering the number of aerospace types we get on campus. Lots of war-time talk here. If I get drafted in this Ukrainian conflict, Dr. DeFrain, I鈥檇 appreciate at least one epistle you could throw in so some poor graduate student in the future can see my name in their Special Collections research (look at that, throwing in contemporary references for the poor researcher).

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

Seemed to be super tight, or that could鈥檝e just been the nature of colleague-type relations during the 1930-40s. Still, nice to see such pleasant interactions. Lots of personal correspondence about how things are going, as well as some vacation home-type talk.

A man works at a typewriter and a holstered gun hangs in the foreground

Contributor to Gazebo, also a professor of Spanish at the University. He also set up a scholarship.