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College of

Arts & Sciences

Visit our home page at www.unomaha.edu/cas

Nell Ward

Margaret Gessaman

Barbara Hayhome

Martin Fund established

Harold J. Retallick remembered

Women in Science

In 2007, according to the National Science Foundation, "Women continue to be significantly underrepresented in almost all science and engineering fields, constituting only approximately 25 percent of the science and engineering workforce at large and less than 21 percent of science and engineering faculty …."  Despite the societal and institutional challenges women in science face, for most of its history the College of Arts and Sciences has been fortunate to have among its faculty women scientists who are excellent scholars, strong leaders and passionate supporters of the university. Among the early leaders were Nell Ward in chemistry, Margaret Gessaman in mathematics, and Barbara Hayhome in biology. Here, we provide a profile of these UNO pioneers.

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Nell Ward

In 1918, when a newly-founded OU was struggling to stay alive, administrators made the fortuitous decision to hire Nell Ward, who had earned her master's degree in chemistry from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1916. Unlike most of the science faculty from these early years who would teach for a year or two and then move on to more established institutions, Ward stayed. In 1922 she organized Gamma Pi Sigma at UNO, an honorary chemistry fraternity. Ward also sponsored a Pre-Med club and a Chemistry Club.

Ward helped build the university's chemistry program and contributed to the establishment of other science programs. She became dean of sciences in 1927. In 1939 she earned her doctorate in chemistry from the University of Iowa. In 1948, when the chemistry program broke from the other sciences to form a department, Ward became department chair.

In the 1940s Ward's research focused on analysis of cobalt and manganese in the presence of each other. These two metals were critical for war industries during World War II. In 1942 she published "Determination of Cobalt and Manganese by Photometric Methods" with her colleague, Louis Waldbauer of Iowa State, in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, an American Chemical Society publication.

During her career Ward was a member of the American Chemical Society, the American Association for Advancement of Science, the Nebraska Academy of Science, and American Men of Science. Ward retired from UNO in 1955 and passed away in 1986 at the age of 91. Nell Ward Scholarships were established in her honor and are funded through the University of Nebraska Foundation with generous donations from William and Margaret March and Timothy and Florence Leon.

That women are fully capable of excelling in the sciences and in academia is evidenced by thousands of cases such as Ward's nationwide. In fact, in 1870 women constituted one-third of the faculty in institutions of higher learning.  By 1970, however, that number had dropped to 10 percent. The number of department chair positions held by women was at less than 1 percent. In 1970 representation in the sciences was lower than in academia in general.

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Margaret Gessaman

It was in 1970 that Dr. Margaret Gessaman joined the mathematics faculty. Three years later she was appointed chair of the department of mathematics and computer science.

Gessaman received her Ph.D. in mathematics from Montana State University in 1966 and taught at Ithaca College for several years before coming to UNO.

She remained chair for mathematics and computer science at UNO until 1980, when she was appointed dean of graduate studies and research. Dr. Jack Heidel, current chair of mathematics, writes of Gessaman's tenure as graduate dean: "As dean her voice was persistently raised in defense of high scholarly standards. She strengthened the graduate college in the crucial areas of academic and curricular quality and rigor.

"In the early 1980s Gessaman was instrumental in obtaining for the UNO physics department funds from the new Nebraska Research Initiative to support research in materials science. Along with then-Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer she was successful in persuading system administrators in Lincoln that a UNO unit should be supported by NRI funds.

"In the late 1980s Gessaman played an important role in creating a graduate degree program in computer science within the mathematics and computer science department. She used her organizational and political skills to overcome strong opposition from other sectors of the NU system."

In 1983 Gessaman returned to the mathematics faculty and in 1988 once again was appointed department chair. During this period she was active in the UNO Faculty Senate as well as in the continued development of the mathematics program. She remained chair until her retirement in 2000.

The Margaret P. Gessaman Doctoral Student Fellowship has been established by the graduate college in recognition of Gessaman's contributions.

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Barbara Hayhome

Barbara Hayhome earned her Ph.D. in biology at Chicago University in 1970 and went on to teach at California State College at Chico. In 1972 she accepted a three-year research assistantship at Creighton University Medical School, and in 1975 she became a member of the biology faculty at Midland Lutheran College in Fremont, Neb.

In 1978, when Hayhome accepted a faculty appointment in the biology department of UNO, the debate over gender equity had gained public prominence but the percentage of women in the sciences remained largely unchanged, perhaps improving by 1 or 2 percent during the previous decade.

In 1984 Hayhome was appointed chair of the biology department and held that position until she was appointed assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs and associate dean for graduate studies in 1989. During her time in these posts Hayhome is credited with increasing the number of women faculty hired and for helping women faculty advance in their careers. She was honored for those efforts by the Chancellor's Commission on the Status of Women at UNO in 1995.

She also is credited as the driving force in the creation of the undergraduate biotechnology program. Hayhome was a member of the Phycological Society of America, the International Phycological Society, the International Society for Evolutionary Protistology, Sigma Xi, AAAS, AIBS, Botanical Society of America, Genetics Society of America, and the American Microscopical Society.

In 1995 Hayhome died of cancer. Her colleague, Dr. David Sutherland writes, "Aware that she was losing the battle against cancer, Barbara Hayhome decided to make a substantial bequest to establish an undergraduate scholarship in biology.

"She had to be persuaded to let the scholarship bear her name, but just before her death suggested that donations to the fund be encouraged as the best kind of memorial she could imagine.

"Having spent most of her life as instructor, scientist, and administrator, Professor Hayhome placed the highest value on the pursuit of knowledge and fairness, viewing formal education as the best path to individual and social improvement, awareness of the wider world, and the keen pleasures of purposeful, useful work and the life of the mind.

"Assisting a capable, aspiring student along that path, as the scholarship was designed to do, is an appropriate Hayhome legacy that honors her memory and honors the students who will benefit from Barbara's generosity and that of her friends and associates."

The scholarship was established through the University of Nebraska Foundation and has been awarded regularly since 1997.

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Vision of past becomes vision of future

Couple's generosity, foresight continues with

children and establishment of Martin Fund

Charles Martin Sr. and his wife, Mary, knew the value of how a vision of history could inform a vision of the future. And so it was that Martin, a descendant of the Joseph Barker Sr. family, donated what has become known as the Barker Collection to the Douglas County Historical Society.

The Barker collection includes numerous letters written by Joseph Barker Jr. to family in England. In them, 19th century Omaha is described in vivid detail. The letters have been published by the historical society in two volumes entitled "Their Man in Omaha." UNO history professor Patrick Kennedy and Chancellor Emeritus Del Weber were part of a team of editors to compile Volume II of the book.

According to Dr. Bruce Garver, history department chair, "Charles Martin Sr. and his brother, Francis Martin, were the owners and managers of a large and successful insurance business in Omaha during the second and third quarters of the 20th century. They also were public-spirited citizens and philanthropists who took a keen interest in history, arts and letters."

Francis Martin, Garver adds, is best known for his bequest of a collection of outstanding 19th century French academic paintings to the Joslyn Art Museum.

Although Charles and Mary Martin may be best known for their donation of the Barker Collection, the true value of all their gifts will continue to unfold many years into the future. The couple traveled throughout the American West and created a comprehensive collection of manuscripts, books and articles on the history of the Trans Mississippi West, with particular emphasis upon diaries and other primary accounts of overland journeys and exploration.

According to the Omaha World Herald's James Ivey in an article published at the time of Charles Martin's death, Martin "for three years was president of the local historical society and was a member of the Nebraska State Historical Society. A nationally recognized expert on the Oregon Trail, in 1988 he received the A. E. Sheldon award for significant contributions to the preservation of Nebraska History."

Prior to his death in 2000 Charles Martin established one endowment to support the historical society's archives and another to install and maintain historical markers across Nebraska.

One of the couple's greatest gifts to future generations was bequeathing $500,000 of stock through the University of Nebraska Foundation for support of teaching and research in history generally and in the history of the Trans Mississippi West in particular. Their children,. Julie Videon of Bozeman, Mont., and Dr. Charles Martin Jr. of Richmond, Ind., consulted with department faculty in creating the Charles W. and Mary C. Martin Fund to Advance Teaching and Publication about Western American History, which is funded by income from the endowment.

Among the projects that can be funded are undergraduate and graduate research stipends, graduate thesis fellowships, faculty research grants, research equipment and collections, and teaching enhancement. The fund also provides for two professorships: The Charles W. and Mary C. Martin Professor of Western American History and The Charles W. and Mary C. Martin Professor of History.

Projects funded for the 2005-2006 academic year included travel and other research expenses for two graduate students working on their master's theses. Brandon Barth is researching Civil War officer Alfred Sully. Sully served in the Nebraska and Dakota territories both before and after the Civil War. In his early years he was known for his skills as an "Indian fighter" and played key roles in later years in supervision of and investigation of Indian affairs. Ted Wehrbein is researching Robert B. Crosby, governor of Nebraska from 1953 to 1955 and known as "the Boy Governor from North Platte."

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Geography's Retallick remembered

Professor's impact extended 21 years

Harold J. Retallick was the "hero citizen" described in Tom Brokaw's book "The Greatest Generation." When he passed away at the age of 90 in September 2006, his family, this institution and the country bid farewell to one more of that modest and self-sacrificing generation.

Professor of Geography Charles Gildersleeve says of his colleague, "There are times when we must pause and thank the well-digger when we take a cool drink of water. Harold was among the best of the well-diggers."

Born in 1916 in Eau Claire, Wisc., Retallick worked his way through college as a laborer, blueprint reader, surveyor and pea grader for a local canning company. He married his high school sweetheart, Lois Gabus, in 1936. After graduating he served as principal of Ojibwa Public School and as town constable.

He was called to active duty in B Company of the Wisconsin National Guard and deployed to the Pacific theater in 1940. He was twice wounded and four times decorated, receiving the Bronze and Silver Stars for meritorious service above and beyond the call of duty, the Purple Heart, and the Oak Leaf Cluster.

After the war, Retallick, as so many other Americans, returned to raise his family and shape a country. He and Lois moved to Worcester, Mass., with their son Richard. There Retallick completed work toward master's and doctoral degrees in geography. Daughter Kathy was born at this time.

Retallick's dissertation examined the geographical and topographical characteristics of Alaska's Arctic North Slope prior to the building of the Distant Early Warning System and was considered classified material for some years.

After completing his doctorate Retallick taught at Eastern Illinois State College in Charleston, Ill., where daughter Cheryl was born. He then moved on to Southwest Missouri State, where he would be the geography and geology faculty for the first 10 years. Retallick added to his curriculum with physical geography, economic geography, geomorphology, geography of Missouri, conservation of natural resources, human geography, world geography, geography of the USSR, and conservation education workshop.

In 1965 Retallick resigned his post at Missouri to accept an appointment as professor of geography with the University of Nebraska at Omaha, where he specialized in physical and urban geography. Retallick remained active in several projects begun while in Missouri, including an excavation sponsored by the Museum of the Great Plains of an 11,000-year-old mammoth kill. At the same time he became active in many local projects and service organizations, including the University of Nebraska Planning Curriculum Committee, Environmental Impact Committee, Metropolitan Area Planning Agency (MAPA) for Omaha and Council Bluffs, and the Riverfront Development Program.

Retallick retired from UNO in 1986. 

Gildersleeve remembers Retallick as someone who "contributed so much and was so very loyal to our department, university and mission." He adds, "It was an honor to serve with him here at UNO."

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