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Nellie Ohr's parents. Both acedmia professors. Both had ties to Kenya. Were they both CIA?
Was Nellie adopted? CANE daycare centers?
Richard Louis Hauke was a Professor of Botany at the University of Rhode Island from 1959-1989. Born on April 28, 1930 in Detroit, Michigan, and educated in the Catholic schools there, he earned a B.S. in Biological Sciences at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1952, received his M.A. in Botany from the University of California at Berkeley in 1954, and his Ph.D. in Botany from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1960.
Dr. Richard Hauke began teaching Botany at the University of Rhode Island in September, 1959. His principal area of research was the morphology, taxonomy and anatomy of the genus Equisetum (often called horsetails or scouring rushes). He took several sabbaticals to further his studies: Costa Rica, 1966-1967; University of Jordan, Fulbright Lecturer, 1973-1974; University of California at Berkeley, 1980; and Kenyatta University, Kenya, 1987-1988. Also of research interest to Dr. Hauke were botanists Agnes Arber, Edith Saunders, and Edmund Sinnott. The result of which was an article entitled "Vignettes from the History of Plant Morphology" available in the collection (see box 15B, folder 100) and on the web at http://members.aol.com/cefield/hauke/, accessed in May, 2001.
Professor Hauke served on various University committees including a term as vice-president of the Faculty Senate (1969-70). He was a founding member of the URI Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), and served as president twice, remaining active until he retired in 1989, becoming Emeritus Professor of Botany, and moved to Atlanta to be with Kathleen. There he taught for an additional 10 years at Georgia State University. Professor Hauke belonged to many scientific societies including: The American Institute of Biological Sciences, Phi Sigma, The American Fern Society, Sigma Xi, The Botanical Society of America, The American Society of Plant Taxonomists, and The International Society of Plant Taxonomists. He was also elected to the honor society Phi Kappa Phi. He was particularly involved with the American Fern Society and held the offices of Treasurer, 1962-1965; Secretary, 1971-1973; Vice-President, 1976-1977; and President, 1978-1979.
Richard Hauke met Kathleen Armstrong at the Newman Catholic Center at the University of Michigan in February 1958. They were married on September 20, 1958. Together, they raised four children: Katherine (1960), Nellie (1962), Andrew (1967), and Henry (1968).
Kathleen Armstrong was born the middle of three daughters of a nurse and a pediatrician on August 27, 1935 in Kalamazoo, Michigan. As a girl she exhibited a talent for writing and was encouraged by her mother. As war brewed in 1940, changing the world, Kathleen's life changed when her father left the family and changed his medical specialty from pediatrics to anesthesiology in 1946. Kathleen's older sister had died of rheumatic fever in 1943. In 1949, her mother took a position as nurse/teacher at the Children's Hospital School in Eugene, Oregon, so Kathleen, her mother, and sister Nellie Ann moved West. In 1949 Kathleen began a family newsletter, The Jargonian, which continued until 1975. When she was 14, she persuaded the editor of the local newspaper, the Eugene Register-Guard to launch a weekly teen-age column, which she would write. It was called "Teeners Topics." The following year she was asked to add a second column "Teen of the Week." During the summer of 1951, her mother, while working on her Ph.D. at the University of Oregon, was killed in an automobile accident. Kathleen and her sister returned to Kalamazoo to live with their father and stepmother on her father's tree farm. She continued writing a teen-age column, "Teen Talk," in Kalamazoo, this time for the Kalamazoo Gazette. In 1953 she financed a trip to Europe with a series of 10 subscription newsletters which described her adventures. She postponed college for a year in order to work for Henry Holt publishers in New York. She saved her money and made her first trip to Africa, by freighter, in the fall of 1954. Kathleen earned her undergraduate degree in Journalism in 1958. While at the University of Michigan, she edited the Catholic students' newspaper. After earning her degree she married Richard Hauke and moved to Rhode Island where he began a position as an Assistant Professor of Botany. During Richard's 1967-1968 sabbatical in Costa Rica, Kathleen taught fifth grade at the Country Day School in San Jose, Costa Rica.
https://webarchives.apps.uri.edu/xml/msg68.xml