APRIL 2017 • NEBRASKAland 5
March Visitor and Williams Art
You are one sneaky devil.
I spent over a half hour looking
through butterfly identification
guides looking for the name of the
butterfly on the bottom of page 8.
Then the next day reading the rest
of the magazine I find the answer
on page 57.
Guess I should read the
magazine first then look for the
visitor. This isn't the first time
you pulled one on us. LOL.
Bill Bolte
Central City, Nebraska
I really loved the article
on painting The Spirit of
Nebraska with Todd A.
Williams. It is wonderful
how NEBRASKAland
includes state-wide
general interest stories
and history as well as
hunting, fishing and all things
outdoors. Keep up the great work!
Eva Johanson
Omaha, Nebraska
It is a mourning cloak butterfly
with its tail hiding the number on
page 8.
My wife, Bente, is enthralled
with the paintings by Todd A.
Williams - they "say" so much!
G. E. Dave Fuller
Lincoln, Nebraska
We found the "mourning
cloak" butterfly on page 8 – was
pretty sneaky by giving us the
clue on page 57. Thanks to my
husband who reads the magazine
completely!
I really enjoyed Todd A.
Williams's paintings, especially
"Early Harvest."
Thanks again for a great issue.
Janelle Downing
Norfolk, Nebraska
Noticed the mourning cloak
butterfly covering up the corner
of page 8. I have raised many of
them from caterpillars.
Jim Brooke
Durango, Colorado
More on Brief History's Nebraska vs. Notre Dame Game of 1922
Dear NEBRASKAland:
My uncle, William Clayton "Bill" Gallaway, was one of the football players
on the field that day when Nebraska defeated Notre Dame. He played guard.
Attached is one of the few pictures we have of him – with his football letter
jersey.
He didn't return to the University after that year. With the onset of the
Depression, he and several friends from Crawford went to Alaska to earn
money fishing for salmon. He was murdered there on Sept. 16, 1935 and is
buried in Ketchikan.
Lela Louise Kennedy Criswell
Daughter of Bill's youngest sister, Josephine Louise Gallaway Kennedy, of
Estes Park, Colorado
Editor's Note: See NEBRASKAland's November 2016 issue pages 14-15.
Or see the article "Game Day 1922"
on NEBRASKAland's Digital Edition
by clicking here.
O
o
b
arch Visitor
e
hings