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genealogy and family history of the Carlson, Ellingboe, Everson and Johnson families of Minnesota and Wisconsin
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Matches 20,961 to 20,970 of 23,510

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20961 Survived his brother.

In the 1940 census, he was a delivery boy for a newspaper. He made $100 in 1939. He may still have been a high school student but the census does not indicate that.

In the 1942 Moline city directory, he lived at home with his parents. He was an employee of the LeClaire Hotel.

When he registered for the draft in January of 1943, he worked for John Deere Plow Co. He was in the Navy by May of 1943.

In the 1949 city directory, he still lived at home with his parents and brother. He was a millwright for the John Deere Plow Works.

Arrested for speeding in August of 1952.

Arrested for careless driving in November/December of 1952.

In the 1953 city directory, he still lived at home with his parents and brother. He was a repair man for the John Deere Plow Works.

He wasn’t listed in the 1954 directory.

In the 1955 directory, he and Doris lived at RD 1 in East Moline. He was a repair man for John Deere Plow.

A Jack D Ryan, b. 2 Jan 1925, died 29 Jan 2014. His Social Security number had been issued in Illinois before 1951. The SSDI did not show a last residence. 
RYAN, Jack Donald (I1579)
 
20962 Survived his step-mother who died in 2010.

Harold Heiberg, 91, Professor Emeritus of Music, died June 17.

He worked as professor of voice and accompanying at UNT from 1971 to 2004, and had a career that included performing at Lincoln Center in New York City and serving as a translator of more than 250 choral and operatic works from German, Italian, Norwegian and French.

As a piano recitalist, soloist with orchestra, chamber musician and accompanist, he played concerts throughout Western Europe, the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada and Taiwan, including 75 recitals for the U.S. Information Service of the State Department in Germany and Austria.

Heiberg accompanied many accomplished musicians including mezzo-soprano Beverly Wolff and violinist Josef Gingold. He served as adjudicator for the Metropolitan Opera and other piano/vocal competitions, published articles in the Journal of Singing and gave frequent master classes and workshops.

During the summers from 1969 to 2007, he taught German art song at the American Institute of Musical Studies in Germany and Austria.

Heiberg’s numerous honors include the St. Olaf College Distinguished Alumnus Award (1974), the UNT Citation for Distinguished Service to International Education (1989) and the UNT J.H. Shelton Excellence in Teaching Award (2000).

Heiberg earned a bachelor’s in music from St. Olaf College and a master’s in music education at Columbia University. His teachers included pianist Karl Ulrich Schnabel, baritone Gerhard Hüsch, pianist Leonard Shure and voice pedagogue Cornelius Reid.
He served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps during World War II.

He is survived by his wife, Eva Lundberg Heiberg, two half-sisters and one half-brother. 
HEIBERG, Harold Willard (I13365)
 
20963 Survivors include son and daughters: Floyd, Anoka; Charlotte Wheeler and Judy Johnson, Brainerd. Preceded in death by parents, husband, brother Russell, and sister Edith. LEIKVOLL, Florence V (I19923)
 
20964 Survivors: Donald Swanson, Melvin Swanson, Nellie Bachmeier, Alphild Vanderhoff

In the 1940 census, she was head-of-household for the family in North Bend. She was 25 and a high school graduate. Living with her were her brothers Oscar, 29, and Donald, 17. 
SWANSON, Alyce Pauline (I28358)
 
20965 Susan Hargrove LOVEN, Martha Tostensdatter (I39112)
 
20966 Susan Hargrove HAUGE, Lars Larsen (I39113)
 
20967 Susan Karen Hedahl, 66, of Gettysburg died Sunday afternoon, July 7, 2013 at the Gettysburg Lutheran Retirement Village.
She was born October 8, 1946 in Minot, North Dakota and baptized there on November 24, 1946.

She was the oldest of four children of Stanford and and Marion Mosvick. During her youth in Willmar, Minnesota, it became obvious to her and others that she enjoyed theology and literature. After graduating for the University of Minnesota in 1968, she taught English in Tanzania, East Africa, for four years as a missionary educator with the Lutheran Church.

On her return to America, she entered the Lutheran Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota and graduated there in 1975. Susan was a pioneer in the Lutheran Church, serving as one of its first ordained women. She was the sixth woman ordained in the ALC Synod of the Lutheran Church on June 15, 1975.

Following three pastorates in the Twin Cities (Minnesota) area, she earned a Masters of Liturgical Studies at St. John's School of Theology, Collegeville, MN in 1982. She then went on to complete a Ph.D. at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California, where she graduated in 1988.

From 1992 to 2012, the Reverend Dr. Susan K. Hedahl was a professor of preaching at Gettysburg Lutheran Seminary, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. She was the first ordained female Lutheran holding a Ph.D. to teach at the seminary. While there she helped found the Fine Arts Council, the Preaching Perspectives yearly lectionary series. She was a member of the clergy roster in the RCLA's West Virginia/Western Maryland Synod where she enjoyed many happy times teaching the lay readers of that synod. Over her career she authored nine books and numerous articles. In 2009 she was installed in the Herman G. Stuempfle Chair of Proclamation of the Word.

Susan was committed to matters related to the Middle East, in particular Palestine, and travelled there periodically. Her interests included study of Arabic. She studied classical guitar in later years with Dr. James R. Hontz at Gettysburg College.

Susan Hedahl is survived by sister, Diane Jacoby, husband Patrick Jacoby and their children, Nathan Jacoby, Philip Jacoby, Peter Jacoby and his family: wife Emily and children Thomas and Julia. She is also survived by her sister Linda Mosvick, and brother, James Mosvick; his wife Susan, and their daughter, Randi Mosvick.

Sue departs this life thankful for God's amazing gift of her life, including the diverse array of many relatives, friends and students; both globally-located and those who live in Gettysburg. 
HEDAHL, Susan Karen (I37762)
 
20968 Susie attended St. Olaf College in 1903-1904, studying in its Music department. She did not graduate. SVIEN, Susie A Peterson (I25866)
 
20969 Suttons Bay, Leelenau according to Cheri Anderson KONNINGRUD, Karen Syversdatter (I34347)
 
20970 Suzanne L. Skupniewitz, age 44, of rural Pardeeville, died on Wednesday, November 25, 1992 at Divine Savior Nursing Home.

Suzanne was born on December 25, 1946 in Baraboo, Wisconsin to Harley E. and Geonette (Graves) Bradley. She was married to Thomas E. Skupniewitz on January 25, 1976 {sic, it was 1980}, in Portage. She had worked as a nurses aide in the Columbia County Home.

She is survived by her husband, Thomas "Bud" Skupniewitz of Pardeeville; four sons, Keith A. Stebbins of Madison, Kerwln Stebbins of Pardeeville, Karl Stebbins of Rio, and Julian J. Hass of Madison; five stepchildren, Ellen (Gerald) Cloudy of Kodiak, Alaska, Tom Skupniewitz, Jr. of Pardeeville, Ann Skupniewitz of Billingham, Washington, Lee (Tyler) Pease of Fredonia, Wisconsin, and Michael Skupniewitz of Anchorage, Alaska; nine grandchildren; a sister, Joan (Don) Anderson of Rio; her stepfather, Howard Baasch of Pardeeville; and nieces, nephews, and other dear relatives and friends.

She was Mrs. Suzanne L. Stebbins of Pardeeville in 1979. 
BRADLEY, Suzanne Lorraine (I26466)
 

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