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Abbott Concert Hall (1982)When the Kleinpell Fine Arts Building was constructed and dedicated, there was a Recital Hall in which musical events took place, many of them led by Professor William Abbott, chairman of the Music Department 1957-1969 and a professor of music until his death in 1980. Upon the recommendation of the Music Department faculty, the Recital Hall was renamed Abbott Concert Hall after his death. At the dedication program, Oct. 17, 1982, there were musical numbers by the Alumni Brass Quintet, Chamber Singers and the Alumni and Concert Choir. Following remarks by Dean Richard Swensen and Chancellor Field, there was a slide presentation of Abbott’s photographs and a woodcut print was displayed in the lobby. This talented musician was born in Lincoln, Neb., educated in Baker and Northwestern universities and had served on several college faculties before coming to UW-River Falls in 1957. He also found time to perform with the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Guthrie Theatre. A memorial scholarship in his name has been established by the Music Department. Proficient on several instruments, Abbott founded the St. Croix Valley Symphony and originated the minor in piano tuning in the Music Department. Though he had many interests in music, he was not enthusiastic about marching bands or even shooting off a cannon after touchdowns at football games! Grace Pilgrim Bloom English Resource Center (Room 250) When they receive a master’s degree at River Falls, most students don’t read about it and see their photos in Orlando, Miami, Los Angeles, St. Paul, Milwaukee, La Crosse and Columbia, Miss. Most don’t receive a congratulatory letter from the U.S. President. But all these things happened to Grace Pilgrim Bloom. She continued to have an interest in history and her thesis was “Osceola Yesterday and Today.” She said at the time of her commencement, “My age doesn’t make me such a special graduate; I’m just an ordinary woman who perseveres.” Her story made the Associated Press wire and appeared along with a picture of her and her advisor, Dr. Marion Hawkins, from coast to coast. She said, “I’m going to continue to study, of course. I have the study habit so deeply that I couldn’t get rid of it if I wanted. Let me tell you, if I were a younger woman I’d be beginning my Ph.D.” She died in her sleep Sept. 6, 1978, at the age of 92. Blanche Davis Theatre (1991)Student plays have long been a part of campus life at River Falls and consequently a theatre was planned when the Kleinpell Fine Arts Building was built in 1972. It was not until April 27, 1991, that it was named the “Blanche Davis Theatre” in honor of the former chair of the Speech Communication and Theatre Arts Department. Dr. Davis had joined the university faculty in 1949, after having an undergraduate degree from Illinois State University and the Ph.D. from Columbia University. In her career she developed the speech and theatre programs and enhanced the role of theatre on campus and in the community. Professor Dick Swensen said he was “always impressed with the high quality of her productions, which were comparable to any fine university production in the country.” Her colleagues knew her to be an efficient and hard worker, yet “a pleasure to work with.” Students knew that she demanded high standards in all that she did. Assistant Chancellor Wayne Wolfe said that students would always “put her at the top of the list when they remember River Falls.” One night two of Dr. Davis’ colleagues drove down Cascade and noted that only three lights were burning in South Hall. Professor Vera Moss observed that “only Blanche Davis and the bathrooms are working.” Dr. Davis’ career as a creative and demanding professor of speech and drama was also shown in the closing part of a poem she had written in 1981 about “Lincoln, Mencken, and God.”
Alberta Greene Studios (1961)Alberta Greene joined the faculty at River Falls in 1923 and taught art here until her retirement in 1945. She had received her B.S. degree from Teachers College, Columbia University. She came as director of the art department but, for many of the early years, she was the art department. Prior to coming to River Falls she had taught art in high schools in Pipestone, Minn., Lewiston, Mont., and Walla Walla, Wash. She also had taught at a normal school in Monmouth, Ore. Her water color paintings were exhibited throughout Wisconsin and at the Chicago Art Institute. She was a member of the Association of American Artists. Alberta Greene was an elegant lady of genuine refinement. She led many students to understand and to appreciate the aesthetic value of the fine arts. After her retirement, the art department honored her in 1961 by naming their studios in South Hall “The Alberta Greene Studios.” A plaque indicating this was placed in the hall outside. With the opening of the Kleinpell Fine Arts Classroom building, the art department was moved there. The name of the studios and the plaque were moved with it. Dan Hartman Student Resource Room (1991)Dan Hartman was a student from Amery, Wis., having transferred to River Falls from St. John’s University where he had studied for the priesthood. While a student here he participated in the Soviet Seminar and later made a bicycle tour of Hawaii and other places. Though he had a serious automobile accident after graduation, his interest in the world was not diminished. He met his tragic death in a plane crash on Mt. Denali, Alaska, at the age of 30 years. Dr. Ruth Hale, chair of the Department of Geography, said of him that “he had an unbounded curiosity about people and places,” was always open to new adventures and “in his short life he crammed about as much living into his years as was humanly possible.” The Geography Department’s Student Resource Room was named in honor of this “very special young man.” Nicholas Jadinak Music RoomThis room is dedicated to Nicholas Jadinak who served on the Music Department faculty from 1947 to 1974. His specialty was the violin but he taught general music courses in both the campus school and university orchestras over the years. Elliot Wold, the long-time chairman of the Music Department, said that Nicholas Jadinak never missed a day of teaching over the years and was a dedicated member of the Community Orchestra that has provided so many musicians an opportunity to perform. Gilbert N. Smith Room (1978) When Dr. Gilbert N. Smith retired in 1972 after having been on the economics staff for 21 years, a room in the Kleinpell Fine Arts Building was named to honor him for his many years of service. Dr. Smith was proud to say that he had grown up on one of the longest streams in America, Lodgepole Creek in Nebraska, and often returned to his old home where life for dry country farmers had been hard in the depression years. Sanford D. Syse Experimental Theatre (1991)In the basement of the Kleinpell Fine Arts building is an experimental theatre room carrying the name of Sanford D. Syse, assistant professor of speech at UW-River Falls from 1963 to 1973. He attended Augsburg College and held B.S. and M.S. degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He was well known in this region for having originated and directed the St. Croix Valley Summer Theatre and was active in the St. Croix Valley Arts Guild. Syse died Nov. 28, 1973, after a siege with cancer. The Syse Experimental Theatre Room was dedicated April 27, 1991, at the same time as the Blanche Davis Theatre. Syse established a scholarship for theatre students before his death. Walker D. Wyman Conference RoomDr. Wyman joined the Social Science staff in 1932 and spent his career in River Falls until retirement in 1978, excepting five years spent as President of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. His teaching fields were in American frontier history and folklore, and he wrote several books in those areas. In addition to the conference room in the Kleinpell Fine Arts building, the new education building was named for Walker D. Wyman.
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