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Endowed Professorships
Mildred King Rohwer Endowed Chair in Medical TechnologyMildred King graduated from the University of Minnesota Medical Technology Program in 1933. She worked as a medical technologist at the Gillette State Hospital for Crippled Children in St. Paul and at the University of Minnesota. For two and one-half years, she was the only technologist for the Department of Medicine under Dr. C. J. Watson. She also worked in the Dental School for Dr. C. W. Waldron, and then supervised the hematology laboratory at the University Hospital. Later, she worked at Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, a school she had attended for two years before transferring to the University of Minnesota. She remained a strong supported to both of her alma maters, and whenever possible she attended class reunions and enjoyed getting reacquainted with her former classmates. She was quite active and loyal to the Delta Zeta sorority, and was awarded "The Order of the Golden Rose" in 1982 for 50 years of membership in the Gamma Chapter.
Mildred King met Carl Rohwer while attending the First Presbyterian Church in Wichita, Kansas. In the words of Mr. Rohwer "It seemed destined that we were both to be there that same evening and my life changed the moment I saw her." They were married in 1951 in Wichita. Although Mrs. Rohwer did not seek employment after her marriage, she remained active with her family, friends, church groups and book clubs. Mr. and Mrs. Rohwer enjoyed traveling and she was especially fond of the Southwest.
Mr. and Mrs. Rohwer continued to be active supporters of the Medical Technology program over the years through numerous contributions to our scholarship funds. In 1987, Mildred and Carl Rohwer established a $250,000 bequest to fund the professorship that bears her name. At that time, Mrs. Rohwer was in failing health, and she died of leukemia on December 1, 1987. Over the years, Over the years, Mr. Rohwer has continued to be a wonderful benefactor to our program, and in honor of his wife of 37 years, he recently began providing additional funds to change the professorship to an endowed chair position, something he says he knows would have pleased her. Mr. Rohwer stated he does not know how much more he could have been blessed than by meeting Mildred King and having her as his wife for 37 years. The Division of Medical Technology has also been blessed by the support given by both of the Rohwers over the years. The Mildred King Rohwer Endowed Chair in Medical Technology is the first of its kind in the country and provides for the continued excellence of the Division of Medical Technology and its' faculty. We are grateful to the Rohwers for their generosity to the University of Minnesota's Medical Technology Program.
Yvonne Chenoweth Cooke Endowed Professorship in Medical Technology
Yvonne Chenoweth Cooke graduated from the University of Minnesota Medical Technology Program in 1937. Following graduation, Yvonne Chenoweth worked for four years in the laboratories of the Minnesota State Department of Health. She remembered performing "hundreds of Wassermans each day." When her husband, Louis Cooke Jr., was in the service in World War II, she worked as a technologist in South Bend, Indiana, for three years. Following the war, she and Louis started Workman Service, a business service company, now called Scientific Computers. Yvonne supervised the office and said that of all of her "med tech skills," it was her organizational abilities that helped most in the management of their business.
Mrs. Cooke also fondly remembered her late father-in-law, Dr. Louis J. Cooke, Sr. This gentleman, for whom Cooke Hall, a University of Minnesota athletic building, is named, was instrumental in starting basketball at the U of M, where beginning in 1897, he coached for 27 seasons. During this time he had ten national championships. "Doc" Cooke was also the initiator of the student health service of the University. This 1905 photograph of Dr. Louis Cooke (right) and Fred Schweitzer (left) was taken in their office. The office was located in the Armory, home of Physical Education from 1897 to 1934 when the athletic building, Cooke Hall, was built. Note the turn of the century furniture and "Little Brown Jug" hanging from the ceiling.
Dr. Karen Karni, former MT Program Director, described Mrs. Cooke as self-effacing, candid in her opinions, and without pretenses. Gracious in manner, she did not wish to be recognized - in a public way - for her generosity. In 1991, Mrs. Cooke provided the Division of Medical Technology with funds to establish a scholarship in her name. One of her goals for the scholarship program was for awardees to eventually repay the money if they were able to do so in order to help future students. Mrs. Cooke always enjoyed hearing about the lives of the students who had benefitted from the Cooke scholarships.
In 2000, Mrs. Cooke gave the Division additional monies to fund the Yvonne Chenoweth Cooke Endowed Professorship. Yvonne Chenoweth Cooke died February 9, 2002, but through the endowed professorship and endowed scholarship, she left a lasting legacy to the Division of Medical Technology. Her magnanimous gifts will continue to be significant and substantial componenets of the Division, its students and the Cooke Endowed Professor in Medical Technology.
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