Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC)

 - Class of 1947

Page 25 of 412

 

Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 25 of 412
Page 25 of 412



Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 24
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Page 25 text:

II. J. Herring A. K. Manchester C. E. Jordan after ha ing rccci cd his A.B. from WofTord College, and his M.A. from both Harxard University and Trinity College. Herbert James Herring, Dean of Trinity College, received his A.B. from Duke and his M.A. from Columbia. Formerly Dean of Freshmen, he was appointed Dean of Trinity College four years ago. Robert B. Cox has served as Assistant to the Dean since March, 1946. He received his A.B. degree from the University of Tenn- essee and his M.A. from Peabody. He was working on his Ph.D. when he came to Duke last fall as an instructor in English. His duties now include the handling of the socia l calendar, cuts, fraternity discipline, and personal prob- lems. The Secretary of the University is Mr. Charles Edward Jordan, a Duke alumnus ' He is connected with the administration of the Student Loan and Scholarship Fund, and ser es on the committee of Religious Activity. In 1 94 1, Mr. Charles Blackwell Markham was elected treasurer of the University. Mr. Markham received both his A.B. and his M.A. from Duke. Charles Aubrey Dukes has been Director of Public Relations and Alumni Affairs since 1944. He served as Assistant Director in this licld from 1929 to 1944. Dr. Alan Krebs Manchester, Dean of Fresh- men, acts as adviser-in-general for all new boys. He holds an A.B. from X ' anderbilt, M.A. from Columbia, and Ph.D. from Duke. DUKE ENDOWMENT THE PURPOSE oj the trust is . . . to make provision in some measure Jor the needs of mankind along physical, mental and spiritual lines. . . . The endowment provides appropriations Jor operating, building and equipping hospitals, orphanages, rural churches, and aiding superannuated Methodist preach- ers. The trust is denominated The Duke Endow- ment, and shall have perpetual existence. Mr. James B. Duke said that the proper tools to use for a successful organization were men of such out- standing character, ability and vision ' Jor ojficers, trustees and Jaculty as will insure the University oJ attaining and maintaining a place oJ real leader- ship in the educational zvorld. THE PUKE ENDOWMENT STATEMENT OF INCOME DEC. 11,1924 -► DEC.3I, 1945 DIVIDENDS AND INTERESTS ON SECURITIES ETC. MINUS EXPENSES, INCLUDING COMPENSATIOM Of TRUSTEES LEAVE UDOITION TO CORPUS OF THE TRUST IN ACCORDANCE WITH INDENTURE RESERVE EONO m INCOME BALANCE AVAILABLE FOR DISTRIBUTION DUKE UNIVERSiry H OSPITALS, DAVIDSON COLLEOE, FURMAN UNIVERSiry, JOHNSON C.SMITH UNIVERSITy, ORPHANAGES, SUPER- ANNUATED METHODIST PREACHERS OPERATING RURAL CHURCHES. BALANCE RETAINED FOR I9i»5 HOSPITAL AND ORPHAN CfRE 21

Page 24 text:

W. H. Wannamaker TRINITY COLLEGE E, IFTY-SIX YEARS of service to Duke University has been, to President Robert Lee Flowers, fifty-six years of devotion to the school ' s well-known ideals of education and religion. Just as the University has grown in the heart of its president, so Dr. Flowers, by virtue of his lively sense of humor and his brilliant mind, has grown in the heart of the University. Upon the election of Dr. Flowers as presi- dent of the University in 1941, he remarked in his message to the students that their in- tlucnce not only determines largely how others away from the campus will evaluate the insti- luliun, but it also molds the aims of those who will guide it in the future. The students are the sole reason for its existence. Preceding his election as president is a long record of competent service. Graduating from the United States Naval Academy in i8gi. Dr. Flowers returned to his native North Carolina as instructor of mathematics at Trinity College, and the following year was made head of the department. He was elected secretary of Trinity College in 1910 and, when Duke Uni- versity was established in 1924, he became, first, secretary-treasurer, and later, vice presi- dent. Upon the death of his predecessor. Dr. William Preston Few, in 1940, Dr. Flowers was elected to his present position. Dr. Flowers ' honorary degrees consist of a Master of Arts presented to him by Trinity College in 1900, and two Doctorates of Law, one recerved from Davidson College in 1927, and the other awarded in 1942 by the Uni- versity of North Carolina. He is also a mem- ber of Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, and Alpha Tau Omega fraternities. In addi- tion to his contributions to the school, he has been active in civic affairs and social service. Just as a great orchestra must i)c directed by a capable leader, so the symphony of life at Duke is subtly directed by the administra- tion. Six men form the nucleus of this adminis- tration, around them revolving a vast system of office workers, professors, and students. Dr. William Hane Wannamaker is ice president and Dean of the University. He came to Duke in 1 904 as professor of German, R. B. Cox C. A. Dukes C. B. Markham 20



Page 26 text:

Miss Alice Mary Baldwin WOMAN ' S COLLEGE DR. ALICE MARY BALDWIN has been Dean of Woman ' s College since 1 930, when it was established. Originally a New Englander, she came to Trinity College in the summer of 1 923 as the Acting Dean of Women for Summer School. Six years later she received her appointment as head of the Woman ' s College. Dean Baldwin received her A.B. and M.A. degrees from Cornell University. Later she received her Ph.D. from the L-nivcrsitv of Chicago. Dean Baldwin taught history until four years ago when increased duties as Dean forced her to stop teaching. She has been very prominent in various educational helds throughout the country. Dean Baldwin has encouraged students to come to her for advice and counsel. As well as being an administrator, she has shown herself to be a true friend, and the close contact she has tried to keep ith all of the girls has endeared her to the student body. She acts, when the need arises, as mediator between professors and students, and also backs the Student Government Association in its under- takings. Washington Duke first encouraged the ad- mittance of women into Trinity College. Since then, the Woman ' s College has made many strides forward. New courses are being added to the curriculum every year, and women are entering into fields formerly labeled For Men Only. The recognition of the value of education for girls is proved by the increasing numbers of applicants of excep- tional calibre. Each year hundreds of girls have to be refused admittance to the college because of lac k of space. The war has proved the ability of women to excel in many fields of endeavor. On the campus, Duke co-eds ha e taken over positions previously held by men, particularly in the field of publication. Competition will grow stronger with each passing year, and a young Lppcrclassincn wait outside .Mrs. .Smitli ' s ollicc to confer with her on schedule changes, courses, and other matters relating to studies. The treasury office window is an annual must in every student ' s career, when pay day in the month of November brings with it the long lines of waiting. 22

Suggestions in the Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) collection:

Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950


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